Welcome to my scrap book. These are collections which I gather when I browse the internet. The contents are copied from the websites and blogs I visited daily and are for my reference. None of them is my own. Hope you enjoy them as much as I do.

Friday, April 20, 2012


what's so shocking? It happened very often in Ireland , greece, spain, italy, almost all of europe and USA last few years when property prices escalate due to irrational greedy developers , real estate agents and mass media and newspapers who keeps spinning positive false news and fairy tales that prices would go up and up and then suddenly when prices crash , this is what happens (like in Europe and US now fire sale is so very common, that for the price of a COE in singapore you can buy an apartment there now!!!!). those stupid people who buy are also equally to be blame.
They should show make it compulsory to for banks to show these movie clips to all buyers before they sign. being old is NOT an excuse as it does not mean you are immune to taxes, debts or stupidity. I have seen alot of old arrogant stupid people who like to how lian and buy big cars and houses but cow beh and cow bu when the repo man comes knocking. these people are deadwood to society.
It would happen in singapore very soon. same for car prices. it is a bubble going to burst. even in China it has burst, just that the garmen there has put a gag on the news and that's why BoXil@i wife is hurriedly getting all her money and cash out of China secretly. Tells you alot when even the top people in China knows something about the state of economy not published in the media and do not even trust their own country or economy!!!!! http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=9SdAHr1AWUs

Wednesday, April 18, 2012


SINGAPORE: A former security consultant was jailed four months on Tuesday for having sex with an underaged Vietnamese prostitute.

49-year-old Winson Chan Swee Teck was found guilty of paying the girl S$100 for her sexual services.

The girl, who is now 17 years old, cannot be named to protect her identity.

Chan is one of three men who were earlier charged for having commerical sex with the same girl.

Chan, who is divorced, had sex with her at a hotel at Lorong 28 Geylang in July 2011. This was after the girl lied that she was 20 years old and refused to show him her passport.

The first of the trio to be sentenced for the offence was a former land and estate executive with the Singapore Land Authority.

57-year-old Kum Chin Tiong, was sentenced to nine months jail in January after he pleaded guilty to paying S$100 for sex with the girl.

A third man, 55-year-old Yeo Joo Meng, a store personnel, also allegedly paid the girl between S$100 and S$130 for her sexual services.

It is an offence to pay for sex with a person under 18 years of age. If convicted, they could be jailed for up to seven years and fined.

In an interview with the media, prominent criminal lawyer Subhas Anandan who is acting for 10 of the men being charged pointed out bluntly that the girl does not deserve any protection under the law:
“How is anybody going to know what he is charged for when you don’t know who the girl is, and what her age is? Who are they trying to protect? As far as I am concerned, this girl does not deserve protection as she is a HARDCORE PROSTITUTE who got so many men into trouble”
However Young PAP Chairman and MP Teo Ser Luck disagrees.
Speaking to queries from the media, Mr Teo said:
“No matter what she did, she is still young. Exposing her identity in the media will not do anybody any good.”
His views were supported by another fellow MP Halimah Yacob who opined her future should be safe-guarded:
“Everyone deserves a chance to repent. The most important thing is, she should receive proper counseling in the future to prevent her from prostituting herself again.”
Despite her well intentions, it is highly unlikely that she will receive any ‘counseling’ in the first place because she is not charged for any offences and the authorities have no right to compel her to attend any counseling session unlike other juvenile offenders.
As she is 18 years old now, it remains to be seen if she will continue selling her body for easy and quick cash after this fiasco which only punishes her clients and allows her to get away without paying a price for it.

The Singapore Inter-agency Taskforce on trafficking in persons has released a detailed response to a recent United States report on human trafficking.

The five-page response - which reiterates and points out new "inaccuracies and misrepresentations" in the US State Department's latest annual report on human trafficking, released in June - was sent to the US yesterday.

The report claims, among other things, that forced labour on fishing vessels has been found to have originated from Singapore, and that no trafficking victims were offered medical and other services at shelters in the past year.

The report also stated that Singapore has not made proactive efforts to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts.

The taskforce, which includes representatives from the Singapore Police Force and the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority and is co-chaired by the Ministry of Home Affairs and Ministry of Manpower (MOM), has refuted the claims.

In its response, the taskforce said that the US report's claim that the Government did not make proactive efforts to reduce the demand for commercial sex acts here was not true.

Pointing out that Singapore has criminalised various commercial sex activities, the taskforce said that it conducted 3,608 anti-commercial sex operations last year that led to the arrests of 94 commercial sex agents or pimps.

Also inaccurate were claims that there were 'no criminal prosecutions or convictions of employers or employment agencies which withheld passports of foreign workers' last year.

The taskforce said that MOM had revoked the licences of three employment agencies, forfeited their security deposits, and prosecuted them in court for withholding workers' passports.

Also "unsubstantiated" was the suggestion that the authorities delayed the publication of independent research conducted on sex trafficking, said the taskforce.

It called on the US State Department, which produces the report, to substantiate the claim.

Reiterating the Republic's serious view on human trafficking, the taskforce called on the US to improve the credibility of its report.

The report is a tool that the US government uses to engage other countries in dialogue to advance anti-trafficking reforms. It also places each country into one of three tiers based on the extent of its government's efforts to comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking.

The report put Singapore on a human-trafficking watch list last year, but has since moved it out of the watch list and up to Tier 2. Tier 1 is the highest ranking and includes countries such as Australia and Finland. Countries such as Algeria and Papua New Guinea have been grouped in Tier 3.

Yesterday's response was the taskforce's second since the report was released.

Last month, it also clarified the inaccuracies with US Ambassador-at-Large for human trafficking matters, Mr Luis CdeBaca, who was in Singapore to attend a related conference

HE CLAIMED he asked the prostitute and her pimp if she was 18 - the legal age to offer sex for money.

Rodney Sim Hang Nge, 61, told the court yesterday that the pimp and the girl confirmed that.

He asked the pimp that question as he was aware it was a crime to engage in paid sex with a person under the age of 18.

The law came into effect in February last year.

Sim, a senior accountant and father of two, told District Judge Jeffrey Sim: 'That question (about her age) is as sure as the sun rises in the east because it was only two sentences in Mandarin.'

But the pimp, Wang Minjiang, 37, said he told Sim that the girl was only 17.

On 15 Dec last year, Sim pleaded guilty to having sex with the girl twice - 3 Aug and 5 Aug last year - when she was only 16 years old.

We are not identifying her as she is a minor.

Sim's lawyer, Mr Shashi Nathan, had already prepared and submitted his client's mitigation plea and he was supposed to be sentenced yesterday.

But there was a dispute over some facts in the mitigation plea, including that concerning Sim's queries about the prostitute's age, and a Newton hearing was held yesterday instead. This is a hearing held to resolve disputed points in a case and ascertain the correct basis for sentencing.

Wang was earlier sentenced to a year's jail for arranging the girl to have sex with Sim and another man, Tan Chye Hin.

Wang, who was brought in as a witness, said that at about 7pm on 3 Aug last year, he, the girl and another woman were at a coffee shop in Geylang when they met Sim there.

When Sim then asked their ages, Wang said he told him the girl was 17 and the woman was 19, which he claimed were the ages indicated on their passports.

He denied telling Sim that the girl was over 18.

But Sim said he asked Wang in Mandarin if he knew about the law prohibiting any girl below 18 from 'working' (a slang for prostitution).

He said: 'He told me 'Don't worry. I know Singapore law and my girl is above 18.'

No passport with her

While on the way to a hotel in Joo Chiat that day, Sim asked the girl if she had her passport with her. The girl said 'no'.

He then asked her how old she was. She told him she was 18. He said he considered Wang's assurance as well as the girl's word that she was 18 to be important facts.

Sim said: 'All my life, I'm a law-abiding citizen and it is my duty... to ensure that I don't do anything against the law.'

The hearing was adjourned to 24 Jun.

For having paid sex with a girl under 18, Sim could be fined, jailed up to seven years, or face both punishments.

Last December, Tan was sentenced to a year's jail. On appeal, his jail term was reduced to nine months on 20 Feb.

Some of Sim's family members who attended the hearing declined to speak to The New Paper.

A TAIWANESE man who molested a woman on board an MRT train last August was fined $4,000 yesterday.

Hsu Ming Ta, 42, a permanent resident working in an IT company, admitted touching the buttocks of a finance administrator on Aug 4 while the train was between the Raffles Place and Tanjong Pagar stations.

The court heard that the 27-year-old woman was facing the doorway when she felt something brush against her, but dismissed it as an accident.

But then she felt another touch and yet another, and heard a commuter shout: “Hoi, what are you doing?”

She immediately turned around and saw Hsu standing very close to her.

Two men who saw him touching her helped her detain him.

Hsu, who is married with a daughter, could have been jailed up to two years or caned or fined or received any combination of these punishments.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012


A man who was found guilty of molesting a woman police sergeant was jailed for nine months on Tuesday.

Ilham Tumpang, 25, a former part-time waiter, was convicted after a trial of touching the then 27-year-old police officer's bottom at Mandarin Gallery on Jan 1 last year.

The court heard that the incident caused deep emotional distress to the victim, now 29, who was in uniform when she was molested.

Ilham, who had taken some alcohol, denied touching her buttock. He had no lawyer. The jail sentence will run together with his current 15-month sentence he is serving.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012


Yesterday, I talked a bit about the Singapore dollar (SGD) and its proclivity to trade alongside the Chinese renminbi. (CNY) But longtime readers know that the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is the real decision maker here on how the currency will perform.

The MAS uses the S$ to assist them in fighting inflation the way a “real central bank” should. And with inflation in Singapore proving to be difficult to tame, I don’t see the MAS changing their policy drastically when they next meet. But with China’s economy moderating, I do expect the MAS to allow the S$ to continue to appreciate, but at a slower pace.

Did you see the story (I saw it on Bloomberg, but it is being reprinted all over the place) about what the Brazilian president, Dilma Rousseff, told the U.S. president? OK, sit down, because this is good stuff. She told the U.S. president that “monetary policies of the wealthiest nations are a drag on global economic growth, especially among rapidly growing emerging economies.” She later told Brazilian reporters that “developed nations’ reliance on interest rates close to zero to stimulate growth creates a monetary tsunami that damages Brazil.”

SINGAPORE - A 32-year-old Chinese national was found guilty on Wednesday and given the death sentence for the murder of a taxi driver two years ago.

In an attempted robbery, Wang Wenfeng had inflicted deep stab wounds on Mr Yuen Swee Hong during a struggle in the SMRT taxi, resulting in the victim bleeding to death.

According to earlier reports, the 58-year-old cabby had picked Wang outside Sun Plaza in Sembawang during the wee hours of April 11, 2009. Wang said he wanted to go to Bottle Tree Village.

While in the taxi, Wang held a fruit knife to Mr Yuen's chest and a struggle broke out.

Despite multiple versions from Wang about what happened during the tussle, Justice Lee Seiu Kin said in High Court today that there was no doubt of an intention to inflict injuries which were enough to cause death, The Straits Times reported.

Wang, an odd-job labourer, later dumped the body in a forested area near the end of Jalan Selimang in Sembawang.

The taxi was then driven to a multi-storey car park in Canberra Link and abandoned there.

Wang also took Mr Yuen's handphone, and when the cabby's wife called, he demanded $150,000 for her husband's safe return, although he was already dead.

Mr Yuen's decomposed body was found six days later. Wang was arrested at a travel agency in Chinatown on April 13, 2009, trying to collect a plane ticket to China.

During earlier hearings in March this year, Wang said that he had originally intended to rob a money changer, but gave up the idea as he saw a queue of taxis in front of the shop.

He later thought of a plan to rob a taxi, but being nervous and afraid, he did not flag down any cabs.

It was Mr Yuen instead who drove by and stopped to ask Wang where he wanted to go - a move which led to tragedy shortly.

adrianl@sph.com.sg

Lawyer suspended 15 months for offering kick-backs to undercover PI
By Carolyn Quek

WHEN lawyer Rayney Wong handed a referral fee to a private investigator posing as a property agent at a meeting four years ago, it was apparently not the first time he had done so.

Captured on video talking to who he thought was another property agent, Mr Wong claims he had offered kick-backs to property agents for referring clients to him before.

Senior Counsel Michael Hwang who was acting for the Law Society in its disciplinary case against Mr Wong before the Court of Three Judges on Tuesday, cited this as an aggravating factor and asked for a 15-month suspension to be imposed on him.

Mr Wong's lawyer, Senior Counsel Sant Singh, however argued that the Law Society had filed only one charge and did not proceed with the other allegations and it should not be considered now in sentencing,

The three judges - Chief Justice Chan Sek Keong, Justices of Appeal Andrew Phang and V.K. Rajah - eventually suspended Mr Wong for 15 months.

Mr Wong, a lawyer for 24 years, had earlier pleaded guilty to offering kick-backs to Ms Jenny Lee, a private investigator posing as a property agent.

She had been part of a group of investigators hired by several lawyers to check if competing law firms were offering fees to estate agents.


WHY become my enemy when you can be my friend?

And when I see you next time, I will take good care of you.

Such a 'make peace' offering may be effective in resolving a dispute.

But in this case, it landed the person who made the offer in more trouble, because he had tried to use it to bribe a traffic police officer into letting him off for a traffic offence.

Sergeant Pah Wenxiang was patrolling along Woodlands Road at about 5.30pm on 31Oct last year when he spotted a driver of a white car making an illegal U-turn and driving against traffic flow for 500m.

In doing so, the driver narrowly missed a collision with a motorcyclist before entering a petrol station.

The cop then tailed the driver and confronted him when the latter stopped at the petrol station.

The driver, Lim Teck Choon, a 56-year-old Malaysian businessman, told Sgt Pah he did not want to be caught in the traffic jam and wanted to return to Malaysia as soon as possible.

He even went on to suggest that it was common for vehicles to reverse and drive against the flow of traffic when there was a traffic jam.

His excuse cut no ice and Sgt Pah proceeded to inform Lim that he would be charged in court for dangerous driving and that he would be placed under arrest.

Tried to bargain

Lim tried to bargain with Sgt Pah by asking whether it was possible not to 'summon' him so 'heavily'.

Sgt Pah replied that he had no choice as Lim had committed a serious traffic offence. Lim acknowledged that he was at fault and that he could not deny this.

While waiting for the police car to arrive, Sgt Pah started a conversation with Lim, who said that he was a businessman with businesses in Singapore and Malaysia.

He added that he also owned plantations in Johor which were popular grounds for fishing and hunting.

Lim then told Sgt Pah: 'Why want to do this, be enemy. You should let me go. We can be friends. Next time you come to Malaysia, Iwill take care of you, still got benefits.'

On hearing that, Sgt Pah felt that the accused was offering a bribe, and he accordingly told the accused that it was an offence to do so.

The accused replied 'okay' and did not say anything else after that.

Still, the offer to bribe the cop landed Lim in hot water.

When his case came up before District Judge Jasvender Kaur, the judge noted that attempting to bribe a police officer is a serious offence.

But she took into account Lim's plea for leniency in this case.

First, after Lim's request of not being summoned so heavily was turned down, Lim did not persist.

Lim admitted he was wrong and that the traffic police officer was only doing his duty.

Judge Kaur said: 'I think it is reasonable to say that the accused would, in all probability, not have said what he said had Sgt Pah not started the casual conversation.'

Lim also pleaded with the judge, saying that he was a deputy chairman of Malaysian Chinese Association for the town of Kampong Jawa in Johor, and he has helped students and orphans in his constituency

As Lim had no previous records, he was spared the jail sentence and was fined $15,000 for the bribery offence.

He was fined $2,500 earlier and disqualified from driving for six months.

The prosecution has since filed an appeal against the sentence.

Under the law, those who commit bribery offences can be jailed up to five years or a fined up to $100,000, or both.

Last edited by metalslug; 24-11-2008 at 01:11 PM.

Supparayan S. Valoo, 49, had admitted to beating the red light when he caused the death of full-time national serviceman Huang Jun Jie, 20. -- PHOTO: SINGAPORE POLICE FORCE

A DRUNK prime mover driver who caused the death of a motorcyclist and injured the pillion rider was jailed for 20 months and banned from driving for 10 years on Tuesday on three charges.

Supparayan S. Valoo, 49, had admitted to beating the red light when he caused the death of full-time national serviceman Huang Jun Jie, 20, along Yishun Avenue 2 at the junction of Yishun Ring Road on Dec 21, 2008.

He also admitted to injuring Mr Huang's girlfriend, Ms Mizushima Emi, 21, by doing an act so rashly as to endanger life.

He had failed to conform to the traffic red light signal while making a right turn, thus encroaching into the path of Mr Huang and the pillion who were proceeding straight from the oncoming direction resulting in a head to side collision.

The third charge he pleaded guilty to stated that he was driving when the alcohol in his body was more than twice the legal limit.

He had 90 mcg alcohol per 100ml of breath when the legal limit is 35mcg.

Mr Huang died five days later.

Friday, April 06, 2012


Lee Wei Ling: What Keeps Me Rooted To Singapore



After reading what she wrote, I have few points to make:

1. She kena serious surgical complication and is now in hospital. In 2002 and 2003, she also kena surgical accidents which nearly end her life. What is wrong with her that she needs to go surgery that often? And I wonder who are the surgeons who committed these accidents and what happen to them now? Are they still practising surgeons in Singapore?


2. She says that LKY and wifey want to stay back to fight the Vietcongs to the bitter end. I wonder why LKY didn't join Lim Bo Seng to fight the Japs, but instead joined the Japanese secret police as their translator.

3. Why did LKY told his children that they are not obliged to stay and fight for Singapore? Isn't not the duty of every Singaporean to do so? If not, then what the hell is National Service Conscription for?


4. Some of LKY's relatives are quitters, giving up their Singapore citizens to be Americans. Who are they?

5. Getting FTs win Olympic medals and the wayang National Day Parade - Wei Ling feels that both are just waste of time and money. So do we, but why is her brother felt otherwise and instead made singaporean to become 2nd class citizens?


6. Gino the physiotherapist became her good friend after treating her in 2002/2003. This Gino is sure a smart fella. I wonder how many patients of Gino became his good pal beside LKY daughter? I wonder If Wei Ling is not LKY's daughter, will she still be Gino's good pal?

7. She says she want to fight for Singapore, Then why didn't she volunteer for National Service in the SAF?


-----------------------------------------------------------






What keeps me rooted to Singapore









Sharing good times and helping loved ones in bad times - that's why this place is home








By Lee Wei Ling






This is an era when international mobility is a privilege that many of our bright young men and women enjoy. The world is their oyster.

They were born and raised in Singapore. Some may have completed their tertiary education here, while others did so overseas. But I have cousins whose children have chosen to exchange their pink Singapore identity cards for United States passports.

If ever there is a major crisis in Singapore, those who would be able to emigrate, be accepted by another country and get jobs there would invariably be people who are wealthy and/or professionals with marketable skills.

The Government knows that talent is mobile and that Singapore must compete with other countries to offer an attractive living environment and vibrant culture so as to retain talented Singaporeans and attract foreign talent here.

I am a paediatric neurologist. I can pass any medical examination that Canada, the US, Australia or New Zealand may impose before accepting me as a high-skilled immigrant or 'exceptional alien'. Would I take such opportunities?

Perhaps in a moment of madness, when my yearning for hiking outweighs all the other factors that keep me in Singapore and make me want to fight for it if the need should arise.

I have been fortunate in having true friends in Singapore. They and my nuclear family are the main reason I will stay if foreign armies invade or bombs are dropped on Singapore.

In 1975, the year South Vietnam fell, I was a medical student training in paediatrics. Paediatricians are especially kind and decent people, for only such people would be drawn to work mainly with children. Still, there was serious talk of emigration among my paediatrician mentors. One did emigrate with his entire family.

My parents called a family meeting in their bedroom soon after Saigon fell. My father, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, then Singapore's Prime Minister, told us: 'Mama and I will stay here to the bitter end. Hsien Loong is already in the SAF and must do his duty. But the three of you need not feel obliged to stay.'

In the end, the Vietnamese communists did not march down Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore thrived, Hsien Yang followed Hsien Loong in accepting both the SAF and President's Scholarships, and my brothers both served out their bonds.

I myself had accepted a President's Scholarship in 1973 to study medicine at the University of Singapore. It was a five-year course for which the Public Service Commission paid me approximately $3,000 to $4,000 annually. Most of it went towards my medical school fees. I was bonded for eight years.

Subsequently, I accepted several more scholarships from the Government and have served a total of 16 years of bond. I stayed on in the public sector after completing my bond and am now in my 31st year in service. I have also had the opportunity to live and study overseas for four years. I enjoyed living in North America.

As a nature lover, I appreciated the magic of the seasons. I enjoyed observing spring trying to announce its arrival with crocuses that may subsequently be buried by a late spring snowfall.

Spring in its full-blown splendour of trees, with budding leaves in the most tender hues of green...The daffodils...The cherry blossoms in full bloom along the Charles River in Cambridge, Massachusetts...Running alone at first dawn or twilight, as petals fluttered down on you, was a magical experience.

Then fall with its burst of colours, turning what was an almost uniformly green landscape into a tapestry of yellow, gold, rust, red and green that met your eyes as you jogged. And then winter announcing the end of the year - time to go cross-country skiing or find an indoor track to run.

The changing seasons enhanced the quality of life in a way that only someone who has lived in New England for three years, as I did, can appreciate. But I always returned home. I never doubted that home was anything other than Singapore.

I suffered a serious surgical complication on Jan 9 and am now recuperating in Singapore General Hospital as I write this. I was in pain earlier this afternoon and, unable to do much, I dozed off. When I woke, my friend Gino was quietly sitting in the next room.

He had brought along with him brand-new running shorts and socks. I had messaged him at noon to ask him to get them for me but did not expect him to do so immediately. Gino is an excellent physiotherapist who helped me through an extremely difficult rehabilitation in 2002. We have been close friends since.

He had recently resigned from the Singapore Sports Council and we discussed the best location for him to set up shop. He gave me a sports massage and we chatted for some time until I felt up to doing my step aerobics.

This morning, one of my cousins dropped by, followed by my doctor-friends from the National Neuroscience Institute.

I am now staring at the skyline that I had stared at from the same window in 2002 and 2003. Then as now I was hospitalised for prolonged periods because of serious surgical accidents, which I later pulled through against great odds.

There are many more tall buildings now than there were in 2002 and 2003. This is a city-state. I am unlikely ever to go hiking again - in Hawaii or Bhutan, Kerala or New Zealand - my one and only real hobby.

What keeps me rooted here are my nuclear family and my friends. We enjoy good times together and help and support one another during bad times. They - rather than Olympic medals or National Day Parades - are the main reason why I feel this place is home and why it is worth fighting for if the need should arise.

The idea of dying does not scare me. But to be willing to stay on and fight for Singapore - that goes beyond simple logic. It is the result of the emotional bond I have with those who are important in my life as well as with those for whom I feel a sense of responsibility.

Tuesday, April 03, 2012


You don’t have to sleep with someone suspicious to get hepatitis if you choose to eat blood clams in Shanghai. Although blood clams are considered one of the more delicious Chinese delicacies, the style of preparation in Shanghai involves quick-boiling them, leaving many viruses and bacteria present, including hepatitis A, E, typhoid, and dysentery.

Saturday, March 31, 2012


Wed, 24.Nov.2010 - 6:00am


THE Education Ministry is initiating disciplinary action against Nur Aini Asmom, the Malay language teacher who harboured her uncle Mas Selamat Kastari after his escape from custody two years ago.

It is likely to end up dismissing her from service.

Friday, March 30, 2012


Police have arrested a 47-year-old woman for selling fake foreign student identification cards.

On 18 March 2012, Police received information about a printing shop at Bencoolen Street that was reportedly selling fake student cards. On 19 March 2012, officers from the Central Police Division raided the place and arrested the shop owner. Various templates of foreign student cards which were believed to have been forged were found in the shop’s computer system. Printing-related paraphernalia including a computer, a cutter, some plastic lamination cards and nine counterfeit student identification cards were also seized as case exhibits. Preliminary investigations reveal that suspect provided printing services and sale of counterfeit student identification cards for a price of between $25 and $65. Investigations against the suspect are ongoing.

Under the Penal Code, offenders found guilty of committing forgery for the purpose of cheating may be imprisoned for a term not exceeding 10 years, and shall also be liable to fine.

Commander of Central Police Division, Assistant Commissioner of Police Tan Hung Hooi advised members of the public that it is an offence to carry or use forged identification cards or documents. He also warned that the Police will not hesitate to prosecute anyone who commits forgery of such documents.

Up to sixty men may soon charged for having sex with a voluptuous teenage model whose ‘services’ were marketed on a porn site after an online vice ring was busted three months ago.

The men include a senior banker, a company director, a senior vice-president of a private company, lawyers, a senior police officer, a primary school principal who is married with a child as well as a scholarship recipient.

One of the bankers was reported to have resigned abruptly in the same month while the former school principal has also left the school.

Doing the right thing?

•Is delaying the payment of CPF (through all kinds of tricky schemes) to retirees (cash poor) a right thing to do?
•Is paying ministers obscene millions a right thing to do?
•Is paying Mercer $860,000 to justify the new salary of ministers a right thing to do?
•Is going to China and elsewhere, using taxpayers money, to give scholarships to foreigners (while neglecting locals) a right thing to do?
•Is treating foreigners (regardless of their talent) as 1st class and treating Singaporeans as low class a right thing to do?
•Is paying interest on CPF (peoples' money) at a lower rate than EPF pays Malaysians a right thing to do?
•Is giving $1.1billion of taxpayers' money to PTOs to enhance their business a right thing to do?
•Is belittling and bullying opposition MPs in parliament a right thing to do?
•Is helping the rich in abolishing the Estates Duty Act a right thing to do?
•Is making Singaporeans paying one of the *highest taxes in the world and not provide basic health care for the needy poor, old, feeble and disabled a right thing to do?
•Last but not least, for a self-proclaimed 1st world government, is bringing in 2 millions foreigners (over the past 20 years) without planning to accommodate their housing, transportation and social needs a right thing to do?
If one cannot do the right things in the first place, how does one do them right?

Six men have been charged in court today for allegedly having sex with underaged prostitutes.

The six men are suspected of paying for sexual services with three Vietnamese prostitutes, one aged 16 and two aged 17, in separate instances in July last year.

It is understood that the six, aged between 24 to 59, are all well-to-do men that include bosses and directors.

Up to nine men may be charged altogether in this case.

The six men are, Justin Guo, 24, sales consultant, who is single and from a well-to-do family; Chan See Sean, 40, the owner of a construction company; Yee Yew Seng, 43, single; Wee Lian Kee, 54, married, and the owner of publishing contractor company, Loh Kian Ann, 55, married, and the director of three construction companies; Seah Seng Kok, 59, married.

The six are currently out on bail and ordered not to have any contact with the victims.

It is understood that the men had all met the prostitutes in karaoke lounges and coffeeshops, before striking a deal with them, then carrying out the sordid transaction in budget hotels in Geylang.

They paid between $100 to $200 for the sexual services.

If convicted, each of the men may face up to 7 years' jail, or a fine, or both.

Source: Lianhe Wanbao, 30 March 2012.

SINGAPORE - A 23-year-old woman who drove without a licence was sentenced to four months' jail for causing the death of an elderly pedestrian.

Candy Siow Pei Shan, a waitress, was also banned from driving for 10 years, The Straits Times (ST) reported.

Siow, who was driving her boyfriend's car on Feb 12, 2011, lost control of the vehicle at the junction of Bukit Batok East Avenue 3 and Avenue 4, the court heard today.

She was driving along Avenue 3 and attempted to make a right turn without stopping at the intersection.

She panicked when she saw an oncoming vehicle and her car veered to the left, mounted the kerb and hit 70-year-old Tan Son Seng, who was on the pedestrian walkway, ST reported.

Mr Tan was crushed between the car and a traffic light pole, and pronounced dead on the scene.

Before the accident which took place in the morning, Siow had also drunk a substantial amount of alcohol between 12am and 5am.

She had consumed brandy with her boyfriend at Club Axchange in Tanjong Pagar, and later brandy and beer at a club in the Esplanade.

According to ST, Assistant Public Prosecutor Raja Mohan said as Siow had failed her driving test 13 times, she would have known that she was not competent to drive, yet she still chose to do so.

Siow, who started sobbing when she was sentenced to jail, was also driving without insurance coverage at that time.

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Crew member of 141 squadron at Tengah Airbase 1973~1975. Frequent Mcgregor club for billiard and Fish & Chip.