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Author: deaf4ever

- B E R I TA _ H A R I _ I N I ( 2 0 0 4 )

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Post time 17-8-2004 09:28 AM | Show all posts
Originally posted by matz_rockz at 17-8-2004 09:16 AM:
dulu and sekarang dah banyak beza,dulu kalau nak talipon my girl school mate,boleh dengar mak dia marah...ni mana punya jantan talipon.
sekarang punya budak2....boleh konci bilik bawak boyfriend/g ...

ya la.. dulu me pun takleh ader guys fone rumah.. mesti at the other line dengar kena marah or duduk sebelah dengar berbual aper.. those were the days.. hehe den there was hp :lol
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 17-8-2004 09:40 AM | Show all posts
gue noticed,ni new paper always paparkan gambar women in bikini lah,gambar local actress in revealing clothes lah....the other time,they write
story on norita samsudin.what she does in bed,or for that matter what people do in bed...is not the newpaper's business.
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 17-8-2004 10:40 AM | Show all posts
Originally posted by chicsee at 17-8-2004 10:27 AM:


What to do? Sex sells.....



would they, in new paper be happy,if someone in straits times do a write up on the sex life of their dead sister.......
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puteri81 This user has been deleted
Post time 17-8-2004 02:18 PM | Show all posts
Errmmm...u all ader baca Berita Minggu tk pasal malay teenage girls yg keje at karaoke and night club?? they said that they worked semata-mata nk dpt pendapatan lebih sikit selain minat dlm musik & menari...
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 17-8-2004 02:30 PM | Show all posts
Originally posted by puteri81 at 17-8-2004 02:18 PM:
Errmmm...u all ader baca Berita Minggu tk pasal malay teenage girls yg keje at karaoke and night club?? they said that they worked semata-mata nk dpt pendapatan lebih sikit selain minat dlm musik & ...



me punya buddy,is a married malay guy,dia ni suka nanyi,he got a good voice.dia kata,kadang2 dia masok bilik...belum apa2 the girls nak strip...
dia strip you kena pay i think.i can't afford to go to ktv....
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puteri81 This user has been deleted
Post time 17-8-2004 02:49 PM | Show all posts
Originally posted by matz_rockz at 2004-8-17 02:30 PM:



me punya buddy,is a married malay guy,dia ni suka nanyi,he got a good voice.dia kata,kadang2 dia masok bilik...belum apa2 the girls nak strip...
dia strip you kena pay i think.i can't afford ...



ada satu mamat malay nie...dia kata every mth(klu tk silap) he will spent $50 tu tk termasuk layanan special frm the girls....

some girls even dpt $200 for spending a night wth customer....
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 17-8-2004 02:58 PM | Show all posts
Originally posted by puteri81 at 17-8-2004 02:49 PM:



ada satu mamat malay nie...dia kata every mth(klu tk silap) he will spent $50 tu tk termasuk layanan special frm the girls....

some girls even dpt $200 for spending a night wth customer....


nyanyi lagu maciam macdonald..............

and a kang kang here
and a kang kang there
here kang,there kang
everywhere kang kang
old pak abu like to sing
eeee ay ee ah oooo
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 18-8-2004 09:53 AM | Show all posts
nihari baca paper, ada 4 people killed in motorcyle accident....seram dibuat nya..me kalau cycle,me always use pedestrian walkway,me cycle slow,jadi not a danger to others...
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Post time 18-8-2004 11:08 AM | Show all posts

Yang ni eh Abg Matz....

AUG 18, 2004
Death on wheels
Four people die within 18 hours of each other on Monday, as accident rate for motorcyclists continues to rise

By K.C. Vijayan

FOUR people died on Monday in one 18-hour spell as a result of motorcycle accidents - the worst bike accident toll since January, when six motorcyclists were killed within three days.

First to die was a soldier thrown off his motorcycle and killed a split second after knocking down another soldier who was crossing the road to the Safti Training Institute where both men worked.

Staff Sergeant Mohamed Eizahar Abdullah's bike hit Private Nelson Lau Wei Yong moments after he had got off a bus at about 7.25am and walked across the road to Safti, in Upper Jurong Road.

SSgt Eizahar, 28, crashed into the central road divider. The impact flung him off the machine and onto the grass verge. He died on the spot. His bike then hit a tree and landed on the opposite side of the road.

Mr Lau, 20, was taken with hip injuries to the National University Hospital (NUH) where he died less than five hours later, said police spokesman Tan Soon Aik.

Both soldiers were reporting for work. SSgt Eizahar was given a military funeral yesterday, and similar arrangements will be made when Mr Lau, a full-time national serviceman (NSF), is cremated at the Mandai Crematorium on Friday.

Scores of servicemen and colleagues, including several senior officers, attended Mr Lau's wake at Block 220, Yishun Street 21 last night.

His uncle, Mr Jeffrey Eng, 43, said that Mr Lau would have finished his national service stint in October. His family had been looking to him to help support them, as he was the only son and the eldest child. He has three sisters, who are still schooling.

'His mother started work in a factory just two days ago to help make ends meet,' said Mr Eng. He said that Mr Lau's father worked as a delivery man. p> Mr Eizahar's father was too distraught to speak, when The Straits Times visited the family home in Pending Road last night.

Some 12 hours after the double tragedy, another motorcyclist died and his pillion rider was badly hurt after their bike collided with a car at the junction of Pasir Ris Drive 1 and Pasir Ris Street 52 at about 7.45pm.

Dispatch rider Tan Eng Tong, 40, suffered multiple injuries and his pillion-rider, Ms Irene Lee, 36, was left with a fractured spine and serious head injuries.

Both were taken to Changi General Hospital. Mr Tan died just before midnight. Ms Lee, still in critical condition, was moved to Tan Tock Seng Hospital yesterday.

The fourth fatality was a pillion rider who had been in critical condition at the NUH since a collision with a car at a junction in Boon Lay Way last Friday. The woman, 23, a retail supervisor died at about 11.30pm on Monday.

Police have appealed for eyewitnesses to call 1800-547-1818.

The overall accident rate for motorcyclists continued to rise. There were 2,208 accidents in the first half of the year, 17 per cent more than in the same period last year.

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

FOUR BIKING DEATHS IN ONE DAY


Victim #1: Soldier, 28, knocks down another

Victim #2: The second soldier, an NSF, 20

Victim #3: Dispatch rider, 40, in a car crash

Victim #4: Pillion rider, 23, in another car crash
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 18-8-2004 11:21 AM | Show all posts
itu hari i baca this malay father,dia baru beli udang,anak nya suka makan lah ni...dia met accident and passed away...alamak kesian betul...
this is life,kita pun sama gitu...tak tau bila nak kena expire......
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Post time 19-8-2004 11:13 AM | Show all posts

I teared when I read this.....

Originally posted by virgomal at 18-8-2004 10:15 PM:

tadi tengok berita kat tv..
kesian this 6 yr old girl kena langgar kat
bukit panjang kalau tak silap..
now kritikal kat hospital
doc kata ader darah beku kat pala otak dia....:cry:




  
AUG 19, 2004
Girl, 6, critically hurt in car crash
By Tanya Fong

A SIX-YEAR-OLD girl is in a critical condition in hospital after being hit by a car on Tuesday evening in Bukit Panjang.

Emily Chua is in the National University Hospital with head injuries and a fractured collarbone.

She had an operation yesterday to reduce the swelling in her brain, and may need another as she has a blood clot in the brain. She has been put on a ventilator to help her breathe.

Emily was on her way home with her three siblings and the family's maid when the accident happened at about 7pm, five minutes away from their flat in Block 481, Segar Road.

Emily, sister Sherry, eight, and brother John, three, had gone with the maid to get their nine-year-old brother, Dion, from school.

All five were about to cross the road when Emily dashed across and was hit by a black BMW.

'My daughter Sherry saw Emily being hit and told the maid that Emily had fallen down,' said their mother, Mrs Chua Li Ping, 32, a factory worker.

At the time of the accident, the maid had been busy giving water to the toddler.

Sherry saw Emily being flung up towards the windscreen, landing on the roadside grass verge, she said.

Mrs Chua, who works the night shift at an electronics factory in Yishun, said she had been napping when the police woke her up at home. She rushed to the scene.

'Many people had gathered around Emily by then. Her body was jerking but she was unconscious. I kept calling her name but she did not wake up,' she said in Mandarin.

Police said the driver of the car was a woman in her 20s. She stopped and got out to see to the injured child.

Emily's brother Dion said the woman was crying.

Anyone who saw the accident can call the Traffic Police hotline on 1800-547-1818.
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Post time 23-8-2004 09:31 AM | Show all posts
Major changes ahead with PM's bold vision
Sacred cows on five-day week, education, women's medical benefits slaughtered

By Chua Mui Hoong

PRIME Minister Lee Hsien Loong last night painted a vision of a Singapore brimming with promise and opportunity, and pledged a major overhaul of policies to get Singaporeans moving to that future.


'We have a lot going for us. Let us all work together to realise our dreams and to make this a bright future for our people and for Singapore.' -- PM Lee Hsien Loong, in his National Day Rally speech last night. -- CHEW SENG KIM
He declared that 'fresh, bold' changes would have to be made to the way Singapore traditionally does things.

'It's a new generation and it's got to take Singapore another step forward, another level higher. To do that, we need a fresh and bold approach. We've been successful, wildly successful, otherwise we wouldn't be sitting here today.

'But we can't stand still because the world is changing, our people are changing and so must Singapore and so must the way we govern Singapore.'

The call for change was no mere rhetoric. Mr Lee chose his first National Day Rally address to announce concrete policy changes.


Related links
Watch Channel i news clip
Click for full speech

In education - 'the most important gift to the young' and long an unceasing worry of Singapore parents - nearly 3,000 more teachers will be deployed. The syllabus should be cut, to reduce pressure on children. 'We must teach less, so that our children can learn more.'

Changes will also be made to the teaching of Chinese language in schools.


MOVES TO BOOST FAMILY LIFE

ENCOURAGING COUPLES TO HAVE BABIES

- 12 weeks' maternity leave
(up from eight weeks) for up to fourth child; Govt to reimburse employers

- Those with children under 12 pay a lower maid levy

- Centre-based infant-care subsidy of $400 a month

- Two days' childcare leave a year for mums and dads with children under seven

- Baby Bonus extended to first and fourth babies (now for second and third only)

- More generous tax benefits

WHAT CIVIL SERVANTS WILL GET

EQUAL BENEFITS

- Equal medical benefits for men and women civil servants

FIVE-DAY WEEK

- Civil servants to have five-day work week, including schools and army camps.

(Details will be released this week.)



Mr Lee slaughtered several policy sacred cows during his three-hour address at the University Cultural Centre, where he spoke in Malay, then Mandarin and finally English.

One was the notion - long upheld by government ministers - that since the man is the 'head of the household', medical benefits should be extended only to dependants of male, not female, civil servants.

Mr Lee announced this would change and the benefits would be equalised, to applause. As he noted, 'Norms are changing. Ten years ago, we could not imagine a young women's team wanting to climb Mount Everest.'

Also announced: a five-day work week for the civil service to signal the importance of a better work-life balance - representing another policy U-turn for the Government, which drew loud applause.

Another change: multilingual signs will now be put up at MRT stations nationwide, to cater to the many older Singaporeans who cannot read English, he said in Mandarin.

To encourage participation and debate, indoor talks will be exempt from licensing requirements unless they touch on race and religious issues. At free speech venue Speakers' Corner, performances and exhibitions - not just speeches - will now be permitted.

These small but iconic changes underscore the new PM's commitment to translate into action the pledge made during his Aug 12 swearing-in speech, to nurture an 'open, inclusive' Singapore.

It was Mr Goh Chok Tong, Singapore's second PM, who made an open, consultative style a priority of his government, bringing the nation beyond the economic focus that preoccupied its first PM, Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

Last night, PM Lee paid tribute to Mr Goh as some members of the audience gave him a standing ovation, saying Mr Goh had indeed brought Singaporeans closer as a people.

Judging from his maiden rally speech last night, the third PM wants to go beyond economics and social bonding, to build a dynamic Singapore that challenges past thinking and encourages greater diversity. This, he said several times, was essential to engage the young.

So even as the Government relooked long-held assumptions, so too must citizens change their mindsets, he said.

Try the impossible, do things never done before, take risks, urged Mr Lee.

He himself did so last night. He said he was advised not to raise a sensitive subject - whether Singapore should have a casino - in his first rally speech. But he chose to do so, to make the point that issues once considered long-settled will be up for review.

He came with a speech outline but no prepared text, letting the words flow spontaneously. He drew laughter and applause many times from the rapt audience of 2,000, with an anecdote here, an ad-libbed joke there, showing a more engaging, funnier side of himself than Singaporeans had seen in public.

He told many stories that underlined the need for mindset change: of a widowed cook who had the guts to become a reflexologist, the bespectacled single man who rejected a match because she too wore glasses, and the side-splitting story of how regulators took two years to figure out if the Duck - an amphibious vehicle - was a boat or a car.

As expected, Mr Lee also announced incentives to try to raise the fertility rate from its dismal 1.26 last year, including a widely-anticipated increase of paid maternity leave from two to three months - with the Government picking up the tab for the extra month.

Summing up, Mr Lee said Singapore had many things going for it.

It sits smack in the middle of the most dynamic region in the world. Recent painful restructuring measures have put the economy on a sound footing. Investments are flowing in and Singaporeans are well-set to take advantage of them.

Most of all, Singaporeans had a fighting spirit, the determination to succeed.

As he told table-tennis player Li Jiawei, who lost her bid for an Olympic bronze medal an hour before Mr Lee began his speech, she had tried her best and done well, and Singaporeans were proud of her. Agreeing with him, Mr Lee's audience applauded.

He ended thus: 'We may be small but we have high hopes and big dreams. And so long as we are a little red dot in the middle of South-east Asia, let people know that we are a people who will keep on trying and never say die. And with this spirit, the future is ours to make.'
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Post time 25-8-2004 09:56 AM | Show all posts
Senoko Power retrenches 41 workers, 85 take up voluntary severance
By Chan Hwa Loon, Channel NewsAsia

Related News
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Post time 25-8-2004 10:02 AM | Show all posts
ckp pasal retrenchment kat atas tu, my hubby pun ade ckp ade one of his colleagues really breakdown bila kena retrench cos he was the unexpected one

recently was power seraya which was a shocking for some of us:ah:
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 25-8-2004 10:23 AM | Show all posts
Originally posted by SweetCandy at 25-8-2004 10:02 AM:
ckp pasal retrenchment kat atas tu, my hubby pun ade ckp ade one of his colleagues really breakdown bila kena retrench cos he was the unexpected one

recently was power seraya which was a sho ...


there was this middle aged lady in my opis,she was around 50 years old.
she kena nervous breakdown when she heard of the retrencment.she's not married and she also have to take care of her elderly mum.....
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JuLaJuLi This user has been deleted
Post time 25-8-2004 03:14 PM | Show all posts
Assalammualaium semuer....

Heheh..SORILAH baru skrg nak menjelma sibuk banget deh....

Yalah JJ dgr brita tu pon dari SC....
SC ur hubby really lucky dis time.tak termasuk dlm senarai.dan teramat kecian..especially  yg kena RETRENCH within 24 hrs ...lagik parah....tak sempat nak cari keje baru....dah dpt notis....
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Post time 25-8-2004 04:29 PM | Show all posts
ni semua dah keluar tadi kat channel news asia the lastest update

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Post time 26-8-2004 01:21 PM | Show all posts

from straits times today

Cabby accused of molesting teen
A 52-YEAR-OLD taxi driver was yesterday charged in a district court with molesting the 13-year-old younger sister of his former girlfriend.

Tan Chin Hwee was accused of molesting the teenager twice at his mother's flat on the morning of Feb 25 last year.


He also faces a third charge of extorting $2,500 from his former girlfriend on April 7 this year.

Tan told the court that he intended to hire a lawyer to defend him.

The case has been scheduled for a pre-trial conference on Sept 7.

The court set bail at $30,000 and ordered Tan not to approach the alleged victims.

If found guilty, he could be jailed for up to two years, caned and fined for molestation, as well as jailed for between two and five years and caned for extortion.
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matz_rockz This user has been deleted
Post time 27-8-2004 09:43 AM | Show all posts
tadi baca papers,ada this lawyer dia pakai duit clients...kena masok jail.
kesian,belajar tinggi masok U.at last masok jail......

teringat dulu ngan aku punya classmate,he was the brightest malay boy in school.teacher aku ni selalu puji2 dia,teacher cakap he will go far etc etc
sekali aku dengar dia masok jail.cbt case.........
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 Author| Post time 29-8-2004 10:52 AM | Show all posts
Originally posted by matz_rockz at 27-8-2004 09:43 AM:
tadi baca papers,ada this lawyer dia pakai duit clients...kena masok jail.
kesian,belajar tinggi masok U.at last masok jail......

teringat dulu ngan aku punya classmate,he was the brightest mal ...




lawyer ni macam siot......... makan duit makcik ngan pakcik dah tua......

takde otak ke..... at least nak tipu, tipu duit bank ke aku tak cakap la......


ni tipu duit orang2 tua.....   ntah dapat balik ke tak pakcik makcik tu duit dorang....

nf:nf:nf:nf:nf:nf:nf:nf:nf:



paling tak boleh accept, masuk paper semalam, dah lupa omputeh ke melayu...

photo dia ngan baca buku rujukan agama tentang hukum syariah....


pose tak serupa bikin!!!
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