Tag: Singaporeans

  • Traffic Police Clarifies Conditions That Constitute Illegal Cellphone Driving

    Traffic Police Clarifies Conditions That Constitute Illegal Cellphone Driving

    The Traffic Police have put to rest uncertainty over whether it is an offence for motorists to use their cellphones while their vehicles are stationary at a traffic light.

    For it to be considered cellphone driving, and thus an offence, three conditions must be fulfilled, Superintendent Louis Loke, Head (Operations & Training), said at a dialogue session with taxi drivers on July 12.

    Firstly, the vehicle must be in motion. In addition, the driver has to be holding the device, as well as using a function on it.

    If only one or two of the conditions are fulfilled, it is not an offence, Mr Loke noted in a clip posted on the Roads.sg Facebook page on Wednesday (July 27).

    But he stressed that, from a safety perspective, “we should always be focused on driving”.

    “Try not to do other things while driving. We’re in control of the vehicle so it’s dangerous,” Mr Loke added.

    Under the broadened Road Traffic Act rolled out last year, motorists caught holding and using any sort of mobile device while driving will be flouting the law.

    “Using” by definition goes beyond just calling or text messaging – as provided for by previous law – but also surfing the Internet, visiting social media platforms, and any other function.

    The rules apply not just to cellphones, but also to all mobile communication devices such as tablets.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Mufti Gesa Asatizah Tolak Gejala Kafir Mengkafir Dan Pemikiran Agama Bersifat Mutlak

    Mufti Gesa Asatizah Tolak Gejala Kafir Mengkafir Dan Pemikiran Agama Bersifat Mutlak

    Masyarakat Islam Singapura perlu menolak pemikiran agama yang menyatakan seseorang Muslim tidak boleh hidup dalam negara berbilang kaum, lebih-lebih lagi jika pandangan itu menjurus kepada kekerasan dan pengganasan.

    Itulah antara tiga batasan yang ditekankan Mufti Negara, Dr Mohamed Fatris Bakaram, dalam menangani kerencaman di kalangan masyarakat Islam Singapura

    Beliau berucap di satu acara perjumpaan Hari Raya yang turut dihadiri para asatizah tempatan.

    Satu lagi batasan yang disebutkan Dr Fatris ialah penolakan gejala saling mengkafirkan sesama Muslim serta pemikiran agama bersifat mutlak yang menganggap hanya segolongan Muslim sahaja yang berhak menjadi ahli syurga.

    Beliau turut menyeru masyarakat Islam tempatan supaya menolak pemikiran agama yang boleh menimbulkan lebih masalah serta yang melarang masyarakat Islam daripada berinteraksi, bermasyarakat dan berhubungan baik dengan golongan dari agama lain.

    Tambah beliau, tindakan tegas perlu diambil sekiranya mana-mana pihak cuba melanggar batasan sedemikian.

    Dr Fatris juga menyifatkan golongan yang cenderung terhadap impian kumpulan pengganas seperti ISIS, yang mengidamkan sebuah negara yang kononnya bercorak Islamik,sebagai “menangguk di air keruh” dan menanam racun di dalam minda generasi muda Islam yang mahukan huraian segera kepada segala masalah kehidupan.

    Beliau menerangkan, itu merupakan pemikiran utopia yang bermasalah dan akan hanya menambahkan kebingungan bahkan bercanggah dengan roh Islam.

    Mufti turut mengingatkan para asatizah yang hadir tentang bahayanya amalan “cut and paste” ataupun meniru secara total pengalaman dari luar tanpa saringan dan penelitian yang matang.

    Mereka juga diingatkan tentang bahayanya jika berlaku pergeseran di kalangan barisan asatizah yang memainkan peranan utama mencorak kehidupan beragama di Singapura.

    Maka itu, Dr Fatris menekankan peri penting mengelakkan perselisihan kerana menurutnya, agama dan tauhid seharusnya menyatukan dan bukan memecah belahkan.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Mazlan Maskor – Anak Melayu Pertama Terima Biasiswa SIM Buru PhD

    Mazlan Maskor – Anak Melayu Pertama Terima Biasiswa SIM Buru PhD

    Seorang jurulatih sukan profesional, menjadi anak Melayu pertama menerima biasiswa bernilai $100,000 untuk melanjutkan pelajarannya ke peringkat Doktor Falsafah.

    Mazlan Maskor, 27 tahun merupakan antara 28 siswazah yang menerima biasiswa di Institut Pengurusan Singapura SIM siang tadi (27 Jul).

    Sebagai seorang jurulatih sukan profesional, Mazlan menyaksikan sendiri bagaimana program latihan yang direkanya, membantu seseorang yang mengalami sejenis sindrom otot untuk berdikari dan berdiri atas kaki sendiri.

    Ini membuatkan Mazlan lebih berminat untuk mendalami bidang psikologi dan motivasi diri.

    Mazlan menjadi penerima Melayu pertama biasiswa SIM-Richard K M Eu tanpa bon bernilai $100,000.

    Beliau yang juga pemegang biasiswa SIM Global Education, akan melanjutkan pelajarannya ke peringkat Doktor Falsafah (PhD) dalam bidang yang sama di Universiti Queensland tahun depan.

    “Dengan kelulusan PhD, saya akan dapat menambahkan kemahiran saya dalam aktiviti-aktiviti seperti penyelidikan dan dapat menyumbang ilmu pengetahuan yang baru kepada bidang psikologi di antarabangsa,” Mazlan memberitahu BERITAMediacorp.

    Muhd Rozaidi Jumadi, 27 tahun, penerima biasiswa Universiti SIM pula, akan menyambung pengajiannya dalam bidang Pengurusan Bangunan dan Projek.

    “Paling utama sekali saya ingin menjadi contoh kepada adik-adik dan rakan-rakan saya supaya memiliki cita-cita tinggi dan meninjau segala peluang yang ada untuk mencapai cita-cita kami,” kata Rozaidi.

    Secara keseluruhannya, $900,000 dalam bentuk biasiswa diberikan kepada para mahasiswa ini, yakni jumlah tertinggi pernah diberikan dalam masa tujuh tahun.

    Mereka merupakan siswazah dari UniSIM dan SIM Global Education yang dipilih daripada 600 permohonan.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Hijabrella Girl: Chill And Learn To Love Lah Singaporeans, Don’t Make Snap Judgements

    Hijabrella Girl: Chill And Learn To Love Lah Singaporeans, Don’t Make Snap Judgements

    Give me a moment to quit cringing at the sight of this shot, and let me explain the mix of feelings I am currently harbouring for about 48 hours now. If I could wrap up and summarise (summaries have never been my forté, my ex-boss would know that too well haha) all that’s floating in my head, it would be this:

    I now know how animals on exhibition feel
    (which is sort of a paradox because I am professionally an education facilitator at the Singapore Zoo haha)

    Hold on a sec, I’m not going to go feign humility and go boohoo why expose my kind act like that…but I’ll just say I feel a bit exposed and violated (which is, again, ironic considering how I’m covered up head-to-toe in the picture). Why? Well here are my list of reasons:

    1. People feel like they have the right to decide whether or not she’s my grandmother or some random Chinese lady, just based on their yet-to-mature worldview.
    I have grown up with both sets of grandparents; Malay and Chinese, an opportunity I am immensely grateful for, for 23 years now. My grandparents, whether or not they be Muslim or not, have taught me a great deal of things of how to be a loving Muslim from the way they accepted my parents’ counter-intuitive fate of love. So I don’t get why 1 photo suddenly flushes my family’s beautiful history, of tolerance and patience, down the drain with insensitive comments like “Is the uploader dumb? they don’t look the same“. Dude, that comment hurt like a wrecking ball straight through my heart, just so you know. (so please rot with guilt, whoever shared that same italicised sentiment)
    She is my beloved Nainai, and actually I’ll explain later in this post what’s been up with her.

    2. I feel like a tree that’s been peed on by countless number of patrons
    I’m not a person who knows exactly how to deal with being in the limelight (I ran from a number of acapella auditions because I can’t take such stresses haha), and so the past 48 hours was a nightmare for me. Acquaintances, friends from 10 years back, and snarky people have all taken a shot at reposting that picture, and other (funny) articles on my Facebook wall; my Instagram inbox is booming with the same picture over and over, from friends who tell me ‘congratulations‘ and ‘oh its you!‘, and I’m just thinking “why you all acting like I’m the lost child at the Ikea info counter that every person wants to claimmmmm?” (this is in reference to that Barisan Nasional post that claimed I was rakyat Malaysia, i.e. Malaysia’s citizen)
    It was funny the first few times, but dude…..I get it, I went viral. Please stop reminding meeeeee. I feel like hiding in a hole for not knowing how to respond to these recognition posts. Do I say thank you? Do I act all smug about it? Do I vehemently refuse to be mentioned? What?

    3. This is the one that’s got me most unsettled: People suddenly feel like they have the right to judge my intentions
    I’ll link this to a concern of mine, which has to do with my belief; It isn’t right to bathe in glory over a good act; good acts should be done with sincerity and not with ostentation in mind.
    So when someone says I did it to pose for the gahmen, I think I have every right to feel offended and upset that someone is accusing me of doing the dirty, when truth was I didn’t even fathom my picture being taken and spread online. Gosh -_-
    I don’t know why some righteous people take it upon themselves to (un)sanctify my act towards my granny – I didn’t ask you to.

    And beyond all those feelings, is the truth behind the photo that matters. So here it is, for all you heart-shaped sweeties out there, who said this photograph melted your hearts (I’m glad and feel honoured that it warmed your hearts amongst all the hatred that’s been going about <3):

    On that fateful rainy day, I was sending my Nainai to the clinic and having breakfast with her instead of my mother because I wanted to lighten my mother’s burden of travelling on her injured leg, and I honestly just missed my Nainai. Mr Jason Quah was under the block with his professional lens and camera, seeking shelter from the freshly-subsiding rain, when he happened to catch eye of my Nainai and I alighting from the cab. And that’s the truth and history of the current Hijabrella meme.

    My interracial/inter-religious family

    My grandmother (Nainai/奶奶; yes, Mandarin is my Mother Tongue) lives alone with my equally aged grandfather (Yeye/爷爷). They’re both into their late 70’s, and they only have 2 sons, so you could say this side of my family is quite closely knit for the very fact that it’s quite a small family. My mother, the daughter-in-law to my nainai, is more of a hero than I am – she used to send my nainai to her regular doctor and hospital checkups, even with her deteriorating knee condition. We don’t live too far off from (Bukit Batok – West Coast) my grandparents, so we are quite accustomed to being the pillars for them.
    My nainai is a very bubbly and loving soul. Though she isn’t even officially Muslim (yet, fellow Muslims please make du’a for my Nainai who already believes in One God), she threw out her pots and pans, at a time when her family was still considerably poor, to welcome my father’s at-the-time Muslim girlfriend (my now-mother), who had dietary restrictions because of her faith. My nainai and yeye, bless their souls, accepted my mother and my father’s love for the Islamic faith with open arms. My nainai reminds me to perform my obligatory prayers every time I visit her.
    My nainai voluntarily sheds light about basic tenets of the Islamic faith and practices to my brother’s non-Muslim girlfriend (haha a ‘phew’ moment for my parents, who are probably glad they get to skip the hard-talk).
    My nainai used to visit my Malay grandmother every first day of Hari Raya, up till last 2 years when she was hit with Meniere’s Disease.
    My nainai watches Korean dramas and gushes about comedic reality Korean shows. (I love korean drama and reality shows – I actually learn the Korean language academically)
    My nainai is the epitome of what every interracial/inter-religious family needs – and I’m extremely grateful/proud that she is my role model.

    She constantly makes it a point to tell people I’m her grand daughter

    Let’s face it – you see a Malay/brown woman holding an elderly Chinese/fair lady….what’s the first thing that comes to your mind (especially when you’re Singaporean)? MAID AND EMPLOYER
    Right? Don’t shy 😉 I know it’s true. My lil bro’s wonderfully Thai classmate easily uttered to my brother, one day when I was fetching him from school: “Hey Ihsan, tell your maid to go home and let us play basketball first”. (to be fair, my brother looks very Chinese and I….am a little browned, and the hijab doesn’t help reveal that I’m racially Chinese by law)
    So my Nainai having been aged and becoming increasingly frail, she always holds on to me like her life depends on it, with her walking stick in other hand, just as the (in)famous viral picture depicts. Her equally elderly neighbours would greet her as we make our way to the bus stop, and speak in Hokkien and I would smile because I understand but have trouble keeping up to converse with them in the same dialect.

    My nainai always starts her convos with them with: “Wa eh soon”; which means “this is my grandchild”. 
    And the person’s eyes would change from a look of “haha” to “wait, really?” to “wow” and then followed by a compliment of how pretty I am, and how lucky my Nainai is to have me hold her. (< this is the part that always tugs at my heart strings) HOW CAN YOUNG PEOPLE NOT LOVE OLD PEOPLE RIGHT. THEY ALWAYS HAVE NICE THINGS TO SAY (…..unless, of course, they’re not fed/waiting in line for the doctor/forced to do things the younglings make them do)

    I don’t blame onlookers when they assume I’m her maid, although its always been a concern of my Nainai’s. However, isn’t it sad that this is even still a concern? sigh c’mmon, metropolitan city….live up to your title!

    (this shot was when I pushed her on a wheelchair for the first, and only, time to the dentist last year. She wanted me to specifically say I was her grand daughter and not some social service lady)
    ———-

    A layer beyond all that truth and feelings above is actually my personal purpose in life.
    As a Muslim who blends in the crowd, more often than not, my small efforts can only go so far.
    Call me an opportunist, but I reckon it’s high time I take advantage of this temporary viral phase to point out a few issues, just from my point-of-view, as a racially-mixed Muslim:

    1. Multiple non-Malay Muslims (be they born or converted to Islam) struggle with acceptance from their families, and I’m actually spearheading a few quiet but ground-shaking projects to rectify this issue; and I need all your help.
    Many of them end up homeless because they’re kinda excommunicated from family due to lack of understanding of their change-of-heart; many of them can’t explain why they felt the urge to convert/follow Islam, in spite of the cultural rules society has concretised over many generations.
    I’m not asking to house every Muslim you meet; I’m asking you to merely read up a lil on the basics of what this “Malay-ised” religion (only in this region it seems that way), and dispel all the confusion and misfired aggression toward non-Malay Muslims.
    (I’m coming up with a book related to this, but maybe when it’s out then you guys will see what its all about)

    2. Interracial families are becoming more and more prominent but the stigma persists…especially with the youth *cringe*
    I’ve heard of painful family dramas when racially-opposing couples get together, I’ve experienced the best of beautiful friends’ interracial matrimonial stories, and I’ve also come across the SGAG comments section (ugh). Singapore, we gots a problem – should we not fix it? Especially with the ‘bright-eyed’ youth who make the bulk of mindless keyboard warriors, talking snap about sensitive issues they can’t even wrap their still-yet-to-mature minds around?
    Dear government, maybe you should consider shedding light on interracial families in the future Social Studies syllabi? (just a suggestion!)

    3. The old lack the lovin’.
    Across, from my Nainai’s block, is where her younger brother resides, alone with no wife or children. He is my granduncle (Kukong/姑公), and he suffers from diabetes and deteriorating eyesight.
    He and my grandfather are in their 70’s, they’re still working their butts off to keep the food on the table, but what’s more important is that these old folks, inclusive of their other independently-living neighbours, always seem so sombre.
    I find it quite sad that me just sheltering my Nainai has stirred hearts for the mere fact that it’s rare to find a 3rd gen care for the 1st gen. My Nainai lights up when she hears my usually-busy-with-school cousins come to visit just because they want to see her, and not because they have an errand to run with her. Imagine how much happy this pioneer gen is being deprived of 🙁
    —————

    Again, this post is just me speaking out beyond the virally-shared picture/meme(< sigh)
    How you wish to view this post, is not of my concern 🙂

    May we all learn to love, more than hate, amidst all the terror going on elsewhere in the world. <3
    Thank you, Jason Quah, for causing the spark that lit up a few other issues linked to the Hijabrella shot 😉
    Can’t believe I’m adding this…but: Hey Singapura, Majulah, ok?

    PS: I know how to have fun and I take this whole situation lightly except for the racial ouchies in the comments section (but haters gonn’ hate, right?). My friends are a fun bunch too. Check out the joke of a photoshop attempt, just to show me how much of an MVP they think I am. HAHA:

    quote my friend: “A face I can trust”

    Just because people make a heck out of my small hijab-to-umbrella act hahah

    …… learn to chill and lighten up~ #notetoself

     

    Source: https://rojakgirlthoughts.blogspot.sg

  • Brother’s Barber Holdings Give Ex-Offenders A Fresh Start

    Brother’s Barber Holdings Give Ex-Offenders A Fresh Start

    He saw his sister making a turnaround after her jail stint for drugs, and wanted to help ex-offenders like her.

    Brother’s Barber Holdings, owned by duo Noor Izwan Noor Jali and Zen She Yikai, both 28, is one of the organisations collaborating with the Singapore Anti-Narcotics Association (Sana) to offer work training for ex-offenders.

    Starting September, the company will be holding a one- to three-month basic haircutting training for ex-offenders for free.

    The owners’ desire to help ex-offenders is very close to the heart – Mr Izwan’s sister is an ex-offender.

    She first started sniffing glue and abusing crystal methamphetamine (Ice) when she was 15, and went to jail in her early 20s.

    Mr Izwan said: “When she came out of prison, she really changed. She started working odd jobs, and now heads her own business.”

    “If my sister can change, so can other people,” he added.

    The duo, who met while working at Jean Yip Salon, said they have many friends who are ex-offenders.

    “We know how easy it is to go back to their old ways, and our training would hopefully give them a clearer sense of purpose,” said Mr Noor.

    Training for their basic haircutting course will take place at Sana and at their barber shop at PPT Lodge 1B Workers Dormitory at Seletar North Link, a foreign workers’ dormitory.

    Each batch of six participants will be given an allowance of $200 per month to sustain themselves before finding a permanent job.

    Training takes place three times a week, lasting five hours each session.

    JOBS

    Graduates from the course are welcome to join any of Brother’s Barber Holdings’ outlets – other than the Seletar outlet, there is one at Tuas and another at Woodlands.

    The Central Narcotics Bureau reported that 3,343 drug abusers were arrested in 2015, a 6 per cent increase from 2014.

    More than two-thirds of the new abusers arrested were below the age of 30.

    Ice and heroin were the two most commonly abused drugs.

    Mr Noor also explained why he and his partner decided to set up shop in a foreign dormitory.

    He said: “When we worked at Jean Yip Salon, we often saw foreign workers glancing our way. We thought of bringing the hair salon experience to them.”

    Their services include haircut, colouring, rebonding, highlighting, and scalp treatment.

    The shop now sees about 100 customers on weekdays and 200 customers on Sundays, mostly foreign workers.

    “Unlike in regular hair salons, we can talk about anything with them. They are more than happy to share about their family, marriage plans,” said Mr Noor.


    Our training would hopefully give them a clearer sense of purpose.

    – Mr Noor Izwan Noor Jali

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

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