Tag: Toddler

  • Mother Got Cheated Of $9000 Worth Of Milk Online By Scammer

    Mother Got Cheated Of $9000 Worth Of Milk Online By Scammer

    A Singaporean woman got cheated of almost $9000 after spending it on 150 tins of milk powder. She lodged a police report after failing to contact the sellers who disappeared with her money.

    She chanced upon a couple who were selling milk powder online for at least 20% cheaper. She trusted them as she had smooth transactions with them before, and later started a spree with 14 other mothers.

    This time, however, the sellers gave excuses like having car break down and other management issues. They gradually became uncontactable after receiving the money.

    As a result, the woman was misunderstood for cheating other mothers of their money. She even had to borrow from her mother-in-law to return them the money and make them appeased.

    Walao eh, milk powder also want to cheat.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

     

     

  • A Letter To “Milk Is Milk” Minister Josephine Teo

    A Letter To “Milk Is Milk” Minister Josephine Teo

    “milk is milk”
    Minister Josephine Teo.

    Dear Mrs. Teo,
    You have truly inspired us with your profound wisdom when you said that “Milk is milk, just buy the cheapest brand.” In fact, you inspired us so much that we came up with our own cost saving ideas…

    1: Salary is salary, and since a monthly salary of $1,000/- a month is enough to buy a HDB flat, why pay ministers millions for? Just pay them $1,000/- a month would be enough, especially since without exception, they’re all such idiots all they do is mess things up rather than solve problems.

    2: Housing is housing, and since a one room HDB flat will shelter you from the elements as well as landed property, just demolish all the landed properties in Tanglin, Upper Bukit Timah and others and built 200 storey HDB flats. Better yet, a one-room HDB flat is a very small space, so like you said before, won’t such small spaces be more conducive to physical intimacy and sex? Oh, and of course, compensate all those living in these areas by giving them flats at the very top floor, and of course, to ensure that the lifts never break down, just do away with the lifts entirely. Hey walking up and down 200 storeys every day is good exercise, right?

    3: Education is education, so why should we squander taxpayers’ monies giving scholarships to ministers’ children when the ministers can afford to pay for their education? And moreover, didn’t Education Minister Ong Ye Kung say that Singapore needs skilled workers? So why not send the ministers’ children to study in ITEs and polytechnics instead of wasting public funds sending them to university on scholarship? This is especially so since without exception, none of them seem to shine in their high-paying jobs. We know, because there’ll be no end of bragging on SPH news if one of them does something exceptional.

    4: Food is food, so why should ministers like Lim Swee Say keep eating in restaurants like Din Tai Fung? There’s absolutely no reason why they can’t eat at hawker centers now, is there?

    5: Jobs are jobs, and whether you’re a cabbie, a cleaner, or a highly-paid senior civil servant you’re still earning an honest living, so why should ministers’ children get highly-paid government jobs or any such? Why not make them become hawkers, cleaners, security guards, cabbies and so forth? Since the government is encouraging us all to work in such dead-end jobs, we expect the ministers to lead by example and make their own children do such jobs.

    See how much your profound wisdom has inspired us?

     

    Source: Jafri Basron

  • Beware Of This Hougang Nanny, Our Baby Became Drowsy And Sick After Her Care

    Beware Of This Hougang Nanny, Our Baby Became Drowsy And Sick After Her Care

    <Facebook complaint by Clara Ong>

    PLEASE TAKE NOTE ON NANNY (DIAH JAMARI) staying at Blk 446 Hougang ave 8 #XX-XXXX. My Daughter had been hospitalise for 4 days after sending to her. Because she’s sick and Super drowsy. Nanny claims that baby’s tired just not enough sleep. But Doctors told us baby’s behaving this way not due to not enough sleep.

    Today, police IO called me and told me that they will need to come down to speak to us to further investigate because they just checked and found out that multiple reports was Made against this nanny over the same reason that babies got drowsy after sending to Nanny’s place. When admitted my baby girl to hospital, nanny doesn’t response or reply any of our messages.

    When we go down her house and confronted nanny about it, she keep changing her story and say that this is due to baby not enough sleep. As a parent, how can we not be worried about our baby girl as she’s barely one year old and yet she have to go thru so many scans and X-ray, whereby is harmful to her body because the radiation is strong. When we told nanny about the scan and X-ray that baby’s going thru, nanny still can replied us with a inhuman reply “is only one time scan so nevermind”. What kind of reply is that.

    When we asked nanny what did she do to my baby girl. Nanny claims that she did nothing and even start giving excuse say that baby’s all the way playing on her own and she didn’t carry our baby at all BECAUSE SHE CLAIMS THAT MY BABY GIRL IS TOO HEAVY FOR HER TO CARRY. if you are telling me that the nanny is big and heavy can’t carry I could understand but you are telling me a small baby you can’t carry? Then why do you even agree to take care of babies or even being a babysitter or nanny? Nanny even called police and claims that we accused her. And even slam her door on us.

    When police arrived at the doorstep, she became another person, she came down and wear make up and even dress up herself and talk so nicely and politely to the police. Really didn’t know what Did she do to my baby girl and cause her this way but currently we are waiting for her blood test result to be out. And also just received news of another baby just took blood test and under investigate because of this nanny.

    P.S:// Please kindly share around to promote awareness of this to prevent innocent babies from getting hurt again.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • State Coroner: Don’t Leave Your Children Alone At Home

    State Coroner: Don’t Leave Your Children Alone At Home

    She did not want to rouse her three-year-old granddaughter from sleep.

    So, around 12.20pm on Jan 20, Madam Manisah Subakin decided to leave Nur Syahamah Syahrom home alone in their fourth-storey flat.

    She then went out to fetch the little girl’s older sister from Rosyth School, which is near their home at Block 542, Serangoon North Avenue 4.

    Madam Manisah, 66, returned just 15 minutes later. To her horror, the toddler was lying unconscious near the void deck.

    The little girl died 24 days later in hospital.

    In an inquiry into her death yesterday, State Coroner Marvin Bay said Nur Syahamah had fallen more than 10 metres from an ungrilled balcony window to the ground below.

    She was in a pink top, pink shorts and had one pink slipper on her right foot while the other one was found nearby, next to a rubbish chute. There was no blood at the scene.

    Nur Syahamah was rushed to Tan Tock Seng Hospital, where it was found that she had fractured her skull and suffered severe traumatic brain injury.

    She was transferred on the same day to KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital where she died of pneumonia on Feb 13.

    Coroner Bay found her death to be a tragic misadventure.

    He said all the other windows in the flat had grilles.

    According to the findings, after seeing her granddaughter lying motionless downstairs, Madam Manisah rushed home and saw a white stool under the balcony window.

    It had originally been placed below a wooden bench in the living room.

    The little girl, who was 1.03m tall, had most likely moved it to the window by herself, reached a ledge and fallen out.

    Coroner Bay said the stool was 28cm high while the ledge was 95cm above the balcony floor.

    He added: “She may not have been able to fully understand that her actions put her at a perilous risk of falling from height.”

    HABIT

    Nur Syahamah had four older siblings between seven and 14 years old, and Madam Manisah had taken care of all of them.

    Madam Manisah said Nur Syahamah had a habit of standing on her bed and looking out of the window. She liked watching her siblings go to school.

    About two hours before the tragedy, the grandmother had opened the balcony window slightly and placed a pillow on a ledge to sun it.

    When she left the flat, she locked the main gate, leaving the sleeping Nur Syahamah alone in the unit.

    The little girl must have woken up and found that her grandmother was not home.

    Coroner Bay said Nur Syahamah had apparently wanted to leave the flat to look for Madam Manisah as she was found with her slippers.

    Finding herself locked in, she might have gone to the balcony window which was partially open and fallen out.

    He added that this case was similar to the one involving four-year-old Darien Riley Zabiq, who suffered a fatal fall after he was left alone at home with his then-two-year-old sister.

    Darien fell nine storeys from his new home in Yishun Ring Road in October last year after he placed a chair in front of a window and pushed it open.

    Coroner Bay said: “Nur’s sad demise does underscore the essential importance of installing and securing grilles and windows to prevent accidental falls, and also to adopt other sensible measures to render a home fully child-safe.

    “Young children are by nature inquisitive and keen to explore their environment.

    “The dangers of leaving young children home alone cannot be overstated.”

    Nur Syahamah’s father, Mr Syahrom Mohammad Yunus, 43, was in court yesterday during the inquiry but declines to be interviewed.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Father Of Abused Toddler, Daniel: I Never Got To See My Son Alive

    Father Of Abused Toddler, Daniel: I Never Got To See My Son Alive

    He was in prison when his son was born.

    Day after day, he counted down the days to when he could hold his boy in his arms.

    But when Mr Mohamad Nasser Abdul Gani could finally do that, it was too late.

    The only time he got to hold Mohamad Daniel Mohamad Nasser was when he was about to bury him.

    His son died on Nov 23 last year, about a month before his third birthday, after 25 days of sustained abuse by his mother, Zaidah, 41, and her live-in boyfriend, Zaini Jamari, 46.

    Choking back tears, Mr Nasser, 41, told The New Paper yesterday: “I never got to see him alive.

    “The only time I held him in my arms, he was a lifeless corpse.”


    Mr Mohamad Nasser Abdul Gani. TNP PHOTO: JEREMY LONG

    He said he had spent 18 months behind bars from December 2012 to June 2014 for drug-related offences.

    Two months before he went in, Mr Nasser was informed by Zaidah, whom he had married in Batam and later divorced, that she was pregnant with his child.

    A few weeks into his sentence, Mr Nasser said an officer asked him to sign a document, which informed him that he was the father to a boy named Daniel.

    This gave him something to look forward to after serving his time.

    “I told myself that I would find my son after I got out,” said Mr Nasser, who works as a cleaner.

    LONG SEARCH

    But after his release, he found out that Zaidah was no longer living at her old address.

    Making it his top priority to find Daniel, Mr Nasser reached out to Zaidah’s friends, tried all possible phone numbers he could think of and even visited places he thought she might frequent.

    A year of searching yielded no results. None of his friends or acquaintances knew where Zaidah and Daniel were.


    Mohamad Daniel Mohamad Nasser died about a month before his third birthday. PHOTO: ABDU MANAF AL ANSARI

    Frustrated by each failed attempt to find his boy, he started losing hope of ever meeting Daniel.

    Mr Nasser, who has two older children from a previous marriage, said: “I was not even given a chance to meet my own son.

    “I did everything I could, but they could not be found anywhere. I thought that I would never see or hear about Daniel ever again.”

    About five months later, on the evening of Nov 26 last year, he finally got news about his son. It was a call from a police officer, who asked if he had a son named Daniel.

    Mr Nasser excitedly said yes, thinking that after more than two years, they would finally get to meet. But what he thought was good news brought his world crashing down.

    The officer told him the heartbreaking news that Daniel had died after being abused.

    “I did not even get to see Daniel alive, and now they called me to identify his dead body,” Mr Nasser said.

    Putting aside his anguish, Mr Nasser went to the mortuary the next day and saw his son for the first time.

    It left him in tears.

    CUTS AND BRUISES

    “There were cuts and bruises everywhere on his tiny body,” he said.

    “It broke my heart to look at him, my own flesh and blood, knowing that he had been hurt and tortured so badly.”

    Mr Nasser collected Daniel’s body on Nov 30.

    It was to be the first and last day that he would get to hold his son.

    That same afternoon, he and seven of his family members buried Daniel.


    Mr Mohamad Nasser Abdul Gani (extreme right) with his family members at the burial site of his son. PHOTO: ABDU MANAF AL ANSARI

    His brother, Mr Abdu Manaf Al Ansari, said that though they did not get to know Daniel, the family loved him and wanted to make sure he was given the proper last rites.

    “We are the paternal side that Daniel could have grown up with,” he told The New Paper.

    “Daniel was not an outcast, not from a broken family. He had a good family, only that he was denied true love from us.”

    Asked what he would have told his son if he were still alive, Mr Nasser broke down before saying he would have promised Daniel that he would be the best father possible.

    “He was my own son, I did not get to do anything for him, did not get to hold him, or tell him that I love him,” he said.

    “I would have given anything for the opportunity to take care of him.”

    I did not even get to see Daniel alive, and now they called me to identify his dead body.

    – Mr Mohamad Nasser Abdul Gani

    We are the paternal side that Daniel could have grown up with. Daniel was not an outcast, not from a broken family. He had a good family, only that he was denied true love from us.

    – Daniel’s uncle, Mr Abdu Manaf Al Ansari

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg