Tag: Singaporeans

  • Mohammad Ghazi – Thank You Superstar

    Mohammad Ghazi – Thank You Superstar

    All of us tried to stay positive, hoping that you’ll come home soon. Unfortunately, God loves you more and I’m sure you’re in a much better place now.

    Thank you for being the great person that you are. You were always the humble one in the team, yet you played like a superstar. You never fail to encourage me whenever we got the chance to play together.

    You will be remembered as a great teacher who not only made an impact in your students’ lives, but one who sacrificed his life to save theirs. Goodbye my friend. May your soul rest in peace.

    “Truly, to Allah we belong and truly, to Him we shall return.”

    ‪#‎ripghazi‬

     

    Source: Syaifudin Ismail

  • Tribute To A Dear Friend, Mohammad Ghazi

    Tribute To A Dear Friend, Mohammad Ghazi

    Dearest, dearest Ghazi
    My rock, my sunshine, my partner-in-crime…

    Only you can make me dredge up an old unflattering photo of myself and post it for all the world to see.

    There are no words to describe the pain I feel right now.
    So I shall just say that I love you, so very very much.

    Goodbye my dear brother.

    Thank you for the great times we’ve had together.

    Till we meet again.

    “Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone.
    Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
    Silence the pianos and with muffled drum
    Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.

    Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead
    Scribbling in the sky the message He is Dead,
    Put crêpe bows round the white necks of the public doves,
    Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves.

    He was my North, my South, my East and West,
    My working week and my Sunday rest
    My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;
    I thought that love would last forever, I was wrong.

    The stars are not wanted now; put out every one,
    Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun.
    Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood;
    For nothing now can ever come to any good.”

     

    Source: Rachel Rcl

  • Activist Han Hui Hui Calls For S$10,000 Donation To Pay For Legal Fees

    Activist Han Hui Hui Calls For S$10,000 Donation To Pay For Legal Fees

    On 5 June 2015, an email was received by Han Hui Hui informing her that she has to pay $6,000 to the Attorney General’s Chambers as her application OS67 has been withdrawn while she was overseas on 27 May 2015.

    OS67 is an Originating Summons seeking declarations that Singaporeans should be given the rights to freedom of assembly and freedom of speech at Hong Lim Park to demand for transparency and accountability.

    On 6 June 2015, $500 was paid to seek legal advice as OS67 is important to the #ReturnOurCPF case for both the illegal demonstration and public nuisance charges.

    On 7 June 2015, summons, affidavit and other legal documents were prepared.

    On 8 June 2015, a further $256.90 was being paid to the Supreme Court as filing fees.

    On 9 June 2015, the court has granted Han Hui Hui the right to represent herself in court as Mr M Ravi was suspended and there is no other legal counsel available.

    We are looking for 10,000 Singaporeans who care to give $1 each so as to continue this fight.

    This amount is for the court, filing and legal fees to continue the cases of Singaporeans being charged for the CPF Protest at Speakers’ Corner on 27 Sep.

    Send your $1 via Internet Banking, ATM or cheque to POSB savings account no. 279-12328-0.
    (This account belongs to Han Hui Hui and has the sole purpose of organising events as well as fighting lawsuits against us)

    Please help to share this meaningful activity with your friends.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • High Court: No Queen’s Counsel For Roy Ngerng In Defamation Suit By Lee Hsien Loong

    High Court: No Queen’s Counsel For Roy Ngerng In Defamation Suit By Lee Hsien Loong

    The High Court today dismissed an application by blogger Roy Ngerng’s for a Queen’s Counsel (QC) to represent him in a hearing on damages he must pay for defaming Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

    High Court judge Steven Chong also ordered Ngerng to pay S$6,000 in costs, inclusive of disbursements.

    Ngerng was found guilty of defaming PM Lee in a blog post he made last year that suggested PM Lee misappropriated pension funds in a similar way to how the City Harvest Church was accused of misusing church funds.

    The City Harvest Church is currently still before the courts with no verdict yet to be made.

    Ngerng’s lawyer George Hwang had filed the bid on 28 May, and had subsequently cited the precedence of the case as grounds for a QC.

    This is the first time a blogger is being sued by the Prime Minister in Singapore.

    However, Justice Chong said that “novelty is not to be confused with complexity”, as QCs can only be admitted to argue cases in the Singapore courts if they have special qualifications or experience for the purpose of the case.

    He also said that while Ngerng’s choice of QC was well-respected in the field of defamation in the United Kingdom, the subject matter of this case is “local-centric”.

    Another factor for considering a QC was whether local senior counsel was available to take the case, and whether there is a need to engage the services of a foreign legal counsel.

    In response, Justice Chong called Ngerng’s attempts to seek members of the local bar who are not senior counsels to argue his case “disappointing”.

    “If Mr Ravi was suitable at the more complex stage, I fail to see why local non-senior counsels would not be suitable at this less complex stage,” Justice Chong was reported by media as saying.

    Human rights lawyer M Ravi had been representing Ngerng until his license to practice has been suspended on medical grounds. Ravi is currently seeking to have his license reinstated.

    Adapted from media reports.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • LTA: Stiffer Penalties For Repeat Offenders Who Stick Illegal Ads On Lamposts And Pillars

    LTA: Stiffer Penalties For Repeat Offenders Who Stick Illegal Ads On Lamposts And Pillars

    Tougher penalties will be meted out to those caught for putting up illegal advertisements on road infrastructure, such as lamp posts and pillars at sheltered walkways and bus stops.

    From June, the fines for repeat offenders will be increased from $400 to $500, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) said on Wednesday, in an update on its fight to rid the streets of unsightly ads.

    LTA said that the use of anti-stick paint on street infrastructure, which started in 2010, has helped to reduce the number of illegal advertisements and maintain the overall cleanliness of public streets but it did not give figures on the reduction in the number of illegal ads.

    The special paint makes it difficult for ads to be pasted on and also helps to reduce the labour time and cost needed to remove them. It has been applied to more than 16,900 street light poles and road-related facilities at about 600 locations.

    LTA added that since 2011, it has also been providing low-cost advertisement boards near selected MRT stations with high pedestrian traffic. There are now a total of 52 such advertisement boards at 45 locations.

    LTA said it will continue to monitor if the anti-stick paint should be used at more locations, and if more advertisement boards should be set up.

    “Illegal advertisements on our street infrastructure have been a sticky issue, as it is both unsightly, and requires additional manpower and resources to remove,” said Dr Chin Kian Keong, group director for transportation and road operations, LTA.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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