Tag: syndicate

  • Protect Your Children – Malaysian Syndicate Selling Organs Of Children

    Protect Your Children – Malaysian Syndicate Selling Organs Of Children

    Price of organs in Malaysia:
    Heart RM800k
    Kidney RM600k
    Eye RM10K
    Lung RM100K
    Liver RM200K

    Please be careful everyone… kidnappers are now looking for CHILDREN under 15 years old… They are looking for CHILDREN’s ORGANS as they still works well… Be aware if u see Thailand car number plates or strange looking cars or foreign cars around your housing area…

    Source: Lee Khye Hong

  • Beware Of PRC Scammers Approaching You With Pitiful Story To Borrow Your Money!

    Beware Of PRC Scammers Approaching You With Pitiful Story To Borrow Your Money!

    To all my dear friends. I experienced this myself. I was in Tampines today and this woman approached me to ask to lend her some money.

    Kelvin Lua On Scammers

    She say she is from Shanghai and that she ran into some problems here and need money to tide over.So she is seeking a loan assistance and that she will return the money.

    She will ask you for your phone number to pay you back.

    I encounter the same situation/ same story line with a guy in Bedok last week and I say this can’t be a coincidence.

    A syndicate or team is probably operating to scam sympathy money from the public so please share this and warn your frens that we have sympathy for you but we are not suckers either.

     

    Source: Kelvin Lua

  • NEA: Woman Making Curry Puffs At Home Was Part Of Syndicate

    NEA: Woman Making Curry Puffs At Home Was Part Of Syndicate

    ​The woman who was charged and convicted with selling curry puffs without a licence was the operator of a foreign syndicate mass producing curry puffs from her flat, said the National Environment Agency (NEA) in a statement.

    The New Paper published Madam Robiah Lia Caniago’s story on Monday, which attracted many responses from readers wanting to help her.

    The 40-year-old’s husband was jailed for drug offences in March 2012, and Madam Robiah claims she had to make curry puffs from her two-room rental flat at Lengkok Bahru to support her son, nine, and daughter, seven.

    She was fined $3,000, but as she could not pay up, she served a five-day default jail sentence instead.

    NEA said they had found Madam Robiah operating the curry puff business with eight other people in her flat. The curry puffs were being prepared on the floor and in “very unhygienic conditions”.

    The agency also released photographs of Madam Robiah’s flat when they inspected it in June last year.

    NEA’s statement is in full below:

    In 2014, the National Environment Agency (NEA) received public complaints concerning unlicensed mass preparation of curry puffs for sale at Block 61 Lengkok Bahru.

    Acting on information received, officers from NEA conducted a joint inspection together with the Housing & Development Board (HDB) and Ministry of Manpower (MOM), on 27 June 2014 at the HDB flat and found a foreign syndicate mass producing curry puffs. During the inspection, Mdm Robiah and eight other people, all of whom are on social visit passes, were preparing curry puffs on the floor of the premises. The food preparation was done in a very unhygienic condition and caused disamenities to the neighbours such as smell nuisance.

    When questioned, Mdm Robiah claimed that they were all her relatives. NEA’s records showed that four of them had been ticketed between four to 13 times previously for illegal hawking of curry puffs at various public places, such as MRT stations.

    This was also the second time within a month that the same premises was found to be used for unlicensed mass preparation of curry puffs.

    As they had not stopped their operations but continued to flout the law after the first inspection, Mdm Robiah was prosecuted in court for an offence under the Environmental Public Health Act, Section 32 for operating a food establishment without first obtaining a licence from NEA. Under the law, any person who contravenes the provision for the first time shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000. Mdm Robiah was fined $3,000 by the District Court on 27 May 2015.

    Assistance rendered to Mdm Robiah and family

    The Government is aware of Mdm Robiah’s family situation and has been rendering various financial assistance to Mdm Robiah and her family since 2012, when her husband was incarcerated. This includes help for rent and utilities, monthly financial assistance from Ministry of Social and Family Development and Ministry of Education (MOE), as well as services provided by Family Service Centres (FSCs).

    Guidelines on food hygiene and hawking

    NEA takes a tough stance towards errant food operators who flout hygiene regulations, especially those who run unlicensed operations, as they could pose serious threats to public health. Members of the public are advised not to buy food from illegal hawkers. In particular, illegally sold food items such as curry puffs may not have been prepared in accordance with proper hygiene procedures or undergone quality control checks.

    Any Singaporean who wishes to embark on hawking may rent a hawker stall from NEA. Local illegal hawkers in genuine financial difficulties are referred to social service agencies, Voluntary Welfare Organisations (VWOs) and self-help groups. They can approach the Workforce Development Agency (WDA) Career Centres located island wide for career and training advice and services to enhance their job search skills and employability. They can also register with Jobs Bank to search for jobs.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Cannabis Worth $33,000 Found In Car Engine Compartment At Woodlands Checkpoint

    Cannabis Worth $33,000 Found In Car Engine Compartment At Woodlands Checkpoint

    SINGAPORE – About 1kg of cannabis was seized by immigration officials, and a suspected smuggler arrested at the Woodlands checkpoint on Saturday, Nov 22.

    A routine check on a Malaysia-registered car had turned up a block of the suspected cannabis in the engine compartment.

    The Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) was alerted at 1.05pm on Saturday.

    The driver of the car, a 37-year-old Malaysian man, was arrested, CNB said in a statement on Sunday.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • CNB Busts Estimated $200,000 Worth of Drugs

    CNB Busts Estimated $200,000 Worth of Drugs

    SINGAPORE: More than S$200,000 worth of drugs – 1.9kg of heroin, 1kg of cannabis and 198g of Ice – were seized by the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) in two separate operations on Wednesday (Nov 5).

    CNB said on Thursday that officers deployed in Clementi spotted a 28-year-old suspect arriving at a housing block in a Malaysia-registered motorcycle on Wednesday morning. The Malaysian, according to CNB officers, was seen taking a plastic bag from his vehicle before proceeding to a unit in the housing block.

    CNB said he was arrested after he was seen coming down the block without the bag. When officers went up to the unit the suspect visited, a female suspect was also arrested for attempting to flush the drugs down the toilet. The 42-year-old Singaporean had drugs comprising about 1.28kg of heroin, 1,034g of cannabis, 95g of Ice and one Erimin-5 tablet in her apartment, the agency said.

    CNB added that another two male Malaysians – both aged 40 – were arrested when they tried to leave Singapore in a Malaysia-registered lorry on Wednesday afternoon. They were suspected to be involved in the same drug trafficking syndicate, CNB said.

    In a separate operation, CNB officers alongside Singapore Police Force (SPF) officers arrested another suspected drug trafficker at a HDB void deck in Tampines Street 81. CNB said the 42-year-old Singaporean was then escorted back to his suspected hideout where about 270g of heroin and 51g of Ice were recovered.

    In a subsequent search, CNB said another 416g of heroin and 52g of Ice were also recovered from his apartment. Drug paraphernalia such as numerous improvised drug-smoking apparatus and digital weighing scales were recovered too, the agency added.

    Investigations on all the suspects are ongoing. If convicted, they may face the death penalty.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com