Tag: TKPS

  • Solat Jenazah Bagi Almarhum Mohammad Ghazi Bin Mohamed

    Solat Jenazah Bagi Almarhum Mohammad Ghazi Bin Mohamed

    GEMPA KINABALU: SOLAT JENAZAH

    Difahamkan yang jenazah Almarhum Cikgu Mohammad Ghazi bin Mohamed, yang terkorban semasa gempa di Gunung Kinabalu, bakal tiba di Singapura, hari ini, 19 Jun 2015, dan akan dibawa ke Masjid Kampung Siglap untuk disolatkan SELEPAS solat ASAR.

    Inilah cara terbaik untuk kita berikan penghormatan terakhir kepada Almarhum Cikgu Muhd Ghazi dengan kita solat jenazah untuknya.

    Bagi yang berkesempatan hari ini, silakan untuk solat jenazah di Masjid Kg Siglap.

    Almarhum meninggalkan balu dan 3 orang anak kecil. Yang paling kecil baru dilahirkan.

    Harap dapat diuaru-uarkan kepada para pendengar Warna 94.2fm Official Fanpage.

    Terimakasih.

    Ramadhan Kareem

    Salaam Jumaat

     

     

    Source: Mohd Khair

  • Sabah Quake: Reunion Of Guides And Students At Tanjong Katong Primary School

    Sabah Quake: Reunion Of Guides And Students At Tanjong Katong Primary School

    On Tuesday (Jun 16), three mountain guides met the Singaporean schoolboy whose life they helped save following the earthquake that struck Sabah on Jun 5.

    Rizuan Kauhinin, Simon Gohinmin and Mazlee Liong touched down in Singapore on Monday night (Jun 15). The next day, they were reunited with Tanjong Katong Primary School (TKPS) student El Wafeeq El Jauzy, whom they had helped carry down Mount Kinabalu following the 5.9-magnitude quake.

    Also at the reunion was another TKPS student who was rescued – Arnaav Karan Chabria, 11.

    BEFORE THE REUNION

    Rizuan, Simon and Mazlee after breakfast and watching morning television, a short time before the scheduled reunion. (Photo: Kane Cunico)

    “We slept comfortably. I dreamt I was climbing,” said Rizuan ahead of the meeting.

    “I will shake Wafeeq’s hand and ask the boy about his condition,” said Mazlee on the way to TKPS. “The last time I had a chance to ask the boy his name and age, but this time I will ask more and get to know him more.”

    A VERY SPECIAL SHIRT: #TKPS student Wafeeq’s family had this made for the men who saved him in the #SabahQuake. bit.ly/1SjaiWc

    Posted by Channel NewsAsia Singapore on Monday, 15 June 2015

    Wafeeq and his family wore customised shirts, which they intended to present to the Sabahan guides as gifts. “We wanted to give the guides something meaningful. So we came up with the idea of soccer jerseys with Wafeeq’s and the guides’ names,” said his mother, Mdm Sabrena El Huda.

    Added the 12-year-old student: “I made the T-shirts to symbolise the courage of the Sabah mountain guides.”

    Shy El Wafeeq El Jauzy, at home with his family before the reunion. (Photo: Pichayada Promchertchoo)

    Wafeeq has prepared a special jersey for his “saviour” Rizuan. His family had three of these made, each with Rizuan and Wafeeq’s names on it. (Photo: Pichayada Promchertchoo)

    REUNION AT TKPS

    The reunion – arranged as part of an upcoming Channel NewsAsia documentary, Heart of Courage – saw the guides, the two boys and their families meet behind closed doors on Tuesday morning (Jun 16). This is the first time the guides have travelled out of Malaysia, and they will spend two days sightseeing in Singapore.

    Smiles as Rizuan and Wafeeq finally meet again after a trying joint experience in Sabah. (Photo: Pichayada Promchertchoo)

    Rizuan checking out the jersey Wafeeq had made. (Photo: Pichayada Promchertchoo)

    The most vocal out of the three guides, Rizuan said, “The earthquake that happened affected a lot of people. The boys endured a lot of trauma and you need to give them time to get better. They lost a lot of their friends and I hope that they will be strong to continue their way of life.”

    “I’m not just the only guide to help the boys. It was a big operation that involved all the mountain guides,” he added.

    Wafeeq’s father Mr El Jauzy hugs one of the trio, Simon Gohinmin. (Photo: Pichayada Promchertchoo)

    Wafeeq called the chance to meet the men who saved him a “precious” moment. “They helped me all the way from the mountain,” he added.

    His mother, Mdm Sebrina said: “I feel very delighted – the whole family does – seeing them in person. When we spoke to each other, we shared our stories as if we had known each other for a long time.

    “I wouldn’t see this meeting as a closure but a start. I think this sense of brotherly love will continue beyond this episode.”

    Asked if her son will go back to Mount Kinabalu, she said: “He is a very determined boy.” Wafeeq still wants to reach the summit, she added. “I think he has found a very good guide”

    The TKPS students and their families share some quiet time with the mountain guides. (Photo: Pichayada Promchertchoo)

    A total of 18 climbers were killed in the disaster, 10 from Singapore.

    Catch Heart of Courage on Channel NewsAsia, June 23, at 8.30pm.

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • MOE: TKPS Students Were On Simpler Via Ferrata Route

    MOE: TKPS Students Were On Simpler Via Ferrata Route

    The Ministry of Education (MOE) clarified on Wednesday (Jun 10) that the Tanjong Katong Primary School (TKPS) team was on a simpler route on Mount Kinabalu when the earthquake struck.

    Compared with the regular Via Ferrata route, where the elevation of the starting point is 3,520m, the pupils, teachers and their guides began on a route at an elevation of 3,411m, stated the MOE.

    Mountain Torq, which manages the Via Ferrata, added that this was also a shorter route – 281m (indicated in red below) instead of the original route (in green), which is 430m long.

    An MOE spokesperson said: “This is a less steep route compared to the full Walk the Torq route.” She confirmed that the TKPS teams have been using the simplified route since 2010.

    On Sunday, the MOE, based on its initial interviews with teachers and pupils who survived the trip, said the team were on the well-known Via Ferrata route.

    A Via Ferrata is a mountain path comprising a series of rungs, rails and cables on the rock face. Climbers must wear helmets and harnesses to attempt this route and must be at least 10 years old.

    The school has been sending teams to Mount Kinabalu for the past seven years, attempting the original route for the first two years, said Mountain Torq marketing director Quek I-Gek.

    She said the simplified route was also only for a selected group of trekkers. Referring to the TKPS pupils who had taken the Via Ferrata, Ms Quek added: “They’re the best students we’ve guided. Consistently, they’re better physically and mentally.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Sabah Quake: Father Of British Nudist Pleads For Mercy

    Sabah Quake: Father Of British Nudist Pleads For Mercy

    PETALING JAYA: The father of a British woman arrested in Sabah for posing nude on top of Mount Kinabalu has pleaded for mercy for his daughter, 24-year old Eleanor Hawkins.

    “She’s pretty scared and quite upset,” said Timothy Hawkins, who was quoted by the British newspaper The Telegraph on Thursday.

    Hawkins, who owns a mechanical engineering business in the village of Draycott in Derbyshire told The Telegraph: “We really hope they don’t try to make an example of her.”

    It was reported that Eleanor was touring Southeast Asia when she was arrested at Tawau airport as she was about to catch a flight to Kuala Lumpur as part of an extended tour of Southeast Asia following her graduation from the University of Southampton with a Masters degree in aeronautical engineering.

    The tour, which began in January saw Eleanor traveling alone from Thailand to Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam before arriving in Malaysia. She was planning to continue from Malaysia to Singapore, Indonesia and Hong Kong.

    She had reportedly expressed her love for Southeast Asia and Malaysia in particular, saying that Malaysia has ” proper palm trees and decent sunsets. It’s pretty damn amazing.”

    On May 30, a group of tourists allegedly stripped naked and indiscriminately urinated atop Kinabalu. They posed for pictures that went viral after they were posted on social media.

    Their antics angered Sabah’s Kadazandusun tribe who revere the mountain and view them as an insult and desecration of a sacred place.

    On Wednesday, two of the four tourists remanded by police for desecrating Mount Kinabalu confessed to going naked while on the mountain. The four were remanded the same day while police hunt for six other tourists who allegedly committed the offence together.

    The four were Eleanor, a 23-year-old male and his 22-year-old sister, from Canada; and a 23-year-old Dutchman.

    They were remanded until June 13 for investigations under Section 294(a) of the Penal Code for committing obscene acts in a public place. They have yet to be charged in court.

    If convicted, they face a maximum three-month jail term or a fine, or both.

    Police believe the other six tourists, mostly Europeans, were still in the state.

    On June 5, a magnitude 5.9 earthquake struck the mountain and 18 people lost their lives.

    Meanwhile, the Guardian reported that Timothy had spoken to Eleanor on Wednesday morning, saying that it was good to speak to her.

    Timothy added that Eleanor was relieved to be in the hands of the Malaysian authorities after seeing the anger the stunt had created among Malaysians.

    “She’s kind of relieved because she saw it coming. It’s good to know where she is. It is not the kind of situation you envisage when your daughter goes travelling. I have faith in their judicial system,” he said.

     

    Source: www.thestar.com.my

  • Your Boobs Have Angered Mountain Gods

    Your Boobs Have Angered Mountain Gods

    KUALA LUMPUR, June 11 ― The antics of a British national who has been blamed for causing last week’s earthquake in Sabah when she and a group of other tourists photographed themselves in the buff atop Mount Kinabalu, has earned sensational headlines in the UK.

    In UK daily The Sun, the eye-catching headline, “Your boobs have angered mountain gods”, was splattered across its front-page today, against the backdrop of a photograph showing several tourists allegedly in the act of stripping naked on Mount Kinabalu’s peak.

    It also carried the words “Brit girl jailed after strip ‘causes killer earthquake’”, along with a photograph of Eleanor Hawkins, the 24-year-old British woman who was nabbed by police as she attempted to leave the state.

    The Sun also claimed to have an “exclusive” story on the episode,  with an excerpt claiming that the British national had said “I’m scared” and had apologised for what the paper called a “prank”.

    In the same excerpt, it said the backpacker was in jail and was “accused of angering the gods and causing a deadly earthquake”.

    Another paper Daily Star used the headline “Naked Brit girl caused killer quake”, while The Daily Mirror used the headline “Nude student faces jail for ‘causing deadly quake’” along with the line “Locals in Borneo say gods on sacred mountain were angered by photo prank”.

    Yesterday, Sabah police confirmed Hawkins was nabbed at Sabah’s Tawau airport while attempting to leave the state, while three others surrendered themselves — Canadian siblings Lindsey Petersen, 23 and Danielle Petersen, 22 and Dutch national Dylan Snel,23 — to the police.

    The four are currently under a four-day remand at Sabah capital Kota Kinabalu’s police station, where they are being detained to aid in a police probe.

    The police are probing the four under Section 294(a) of the Penal code for public indecency, an offence which is punishable by a maximum three months’ jail term or fine or both.

    They have yet to be charged, but their lawyer Ronny Cham was reported in The Guardian as saying their likely defence would be that Mount Kinabalu’s summit should not be defined as a public place where annoyance could be caused to the public.

    According to UK dailies The Guardian and The Telegraph, Hawkins’ father Tim Hawkins is hoping that Malaysian authorities will only fine his daughter and sentence her “to some kind of relief work” and require a public apology.

    “She’s going to plead guilty and then it is up to a plea bargain from her lawyer. We have faith in the Malaysian justice system, but I have a terrible feeling they might throw the book at her, make an example of them,” he was quoted saying by TheTelegraph.

    According to a police report by Sabah Parks staff, 10 tourists were alleged to have stripped and posed naked for photos on Mount Kinabalu’s peak on May 30 and reportedly rebuffed their local guide who tried to stop them, telling him to “go to hell”.

    The act has angered natives who believe that the mountain is sacred and carries the spirit of their ancestors, with deputy chief minister Tan Sri Joseph Pairin Kitingan blaming a magnitude 5.9 earthquake on June 5 that killed 18 people on the disrespectful act.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com