guvnor This user has been deleted
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WANITA DIDAKWA TIPU LEBIH 100 ORANG HAMPIR $50,000
dasar penipu!!! sialan... |
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guvnor This user has been deleted
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KONSERT DIBATAL, DUIT TIKET BELUM DIPULANGKAN
ni lagi sekor binatang ternakan!!! baik2 nak tngok konsert 'search', skarng orang2 kene SEARCH sama dia nak tuntut refund... |
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guvnor This user has been deleted
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Sanding sendiri
sendiri mau ingat ah~~~ |
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Originally posted by iansuryani at 24-12-2005 10:07 AM
Forum : 24 Disember 2005
Mudah cetak | E-mel
KONSERT DIBATAL, DUIT TIKET BELUM DIPULANGKAN
TIKET telah dibeli sejak awal lagi tetapi konsert Search masih ditun ...
Aku senang je...
kalo si laki bini tu ada niat penipu...
" TAK HALAL!!!!"
abis ceta. Bukan aku sorang, kawan2 aku pun semua kena.
Tapi kalo ada sebab2 lain, dan bukan niat nak tipu, ok la aku just forget it... |
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Originally posted by deaf4ever at 25-12-2005 06:24 AM
Aku senang je...
kalo si laki bini tu ada niat penipu...
" TAK HALAL!!!!"
abis ceta. Bukan aku sorang, kawan2 aku pun semua kena.
Tapi kalo ada sebab2 lain, ...
:setuju::setuju: |
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WANITA M'SIA TERTUA DI DUNIA?
HULU TERENGGANU - Seorang wanita di sini, Cik Safiah Yusof, dipercayai manusia tertua di dunia kerana dikatakan berumur 130 tahun.
Beliau, yang tinggal bersama cucunya, Encik Abdul Ghani Ngah, 63 tahun, di Kampung Butut, Kuala Berang, di sini, dikatakan dilahirkan pada 1875.
Jika dakwaan kaum keluarga dan penduduk kampung dapat disahkan, usia Cik Safiah 14 tahun lebih tua daripada usia manusia yang kini dianggap tertua, Cik Maria Esther Capovila, 116 tahun, dari Guayaqull, Ecuador.
Cik Safiah antara lain dikatakan melalui pemberontakan petani daerah ini yang diketuai Haji Abdul Rahman Limbong pada 1928.
Ketika ditemui, Cik Safiah, masih dapat bertutur dengan baik walaupun pergerakannya agak terbatas.
Bagaimanapun, butiran pada kad pengenalannya mencatatkan Cik Safiah lahir pada 1908.
'Orang zaman dulu di Hulu Terengganu buat kad pengenalan dengan mengirim kepada saudara mara saja, asalkan dapat kad pengenalan.
'Sebagai contoh nenek saya ini ada tiga beradik dan semasa membuat kad pengenalan ketiga-tiganya mempunyai tarikh lahir yang sama, iaitu 9 September 1908. Tidak munasabah mereka lahir hari yang sama,' Encik Abdul Ghani. - Mingguan Malaysia. |
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guvnor This user has been deleted
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wah.. kak browney pande nyanyi seh... |
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Originally posted by guvnor at 27-12-2005 09:08 PM
wah.. kak browney pande nyanyi seh...
part time rock singer aje |
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guvnor This user has been deleted
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Originally posted by deaf4ever at 27-12-2005 09:37 PM
weii rumah v ada karaoke weiii, ko gi sana prektis
roboh blok dia.. |
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CURI DARI AKAUN MAJIKAN: AMAH DIJEL
SEORANG pembantu rumah warga Filipina semalam dihukum penjara empat bulan kerana mencuri $6,000 daripada akaun bank majikannya yang telah lanjut usia, Oktober lalu.
Fredelita Zamora Baltazar, 34 tahun, telah bersubahat dengan teman lelakinya 'Jaja', seorang warga Bangladesh, untuk melakukan jenayah itu.
Hakim Daerah, Encik Victor Yeo, diberitahu, pada 5 Oktober lalu, Fredelita telah mengambil kad ATM daripada dompet majikannya dan secara sembunyi-sembunyi menghulurkannya kepada 'Jaja' menerusi tingkap bilik flat majikannya yang menghadap koridor di Blok 491, Jurong West Avenue 1.
Siasatan polis menunjukkan, sekitar 6.45 pagi hari yang sama, 'Jaja' telah mengeluarkan wang itu dari sebuah ATM berdekatan kedai roti dan kek, Chimes Deli Bakery, di Blok 495, Jurong West Avenue 1.
Berbekalkan nombor pin yang diberikan oleh temanitanya itu, 'Jaja' membuat tiga transaksi dan mengeluarkan wang $1,700 dari akaun milik Cik Sorrell Margaret Eleanor yang berusia 83 tahun.
Fredelita, ibu dua anak dan sudah bersuami itu, naik sedap dan mengulangi perbuatannya sehingga 25 Oktober lalu.
Antara 5 dengan 25 Oktober itu, 'Jaja' telah mengeluarkan wang antara $200 dengan $1,000 daripada akaun tersebut.
Mahkamah diberitahu bahawa Cik Sorrell telah membuat laporan polis pada 5 November lalu setelah mendapati wang dalam akaunnya telah dikeluarkan tanpa kebenaran.
Beliau mengesyaki amahnya telah melakukan perbuatan tersebut.
Apabila diberkas, Fredelita mengaku dialah yang melakukannya.
Memohon agar diringankan hukuman, Fredelita berkata dia menanggung persekolahan anak-anaknya di Filipina manakala suaminya berpenyakit jantung dan masih menganggur.
Dia bagaimanapun dikenakan hukuman empat bulan penjara atas lima tuduhan sementara 11 tuduhan lain diambil dalam pertimbangan.
'Jaja' bagaimanapun masih berleluasa.
Di bawah undang-undang, kesalahan tersebut boleh membawa kepada hukuman penjara sehingga tujuh tahun dan denda.
bodohnya amah... |
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Originally posted by Browneyes at 28-12-2005 07:53 AM
CURI DARI AKAUN MAJIKAN: AMAH DIJEL
SEORANG pembantu rumah warga Filipina semalam dihukum penjara empat bulan kerana mencuri $6,000 daripada akaun bank ...
**** nye Jaja... aku punye la defend bangla bangla ni smua, last2 dia buat hal spoilt market. KNN!...
makan perut kembung la JAJA, baik surrender. |
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3 FIRMA TEKSI GAGAL PENUHI PIAWAIAN
Yellow Top turut didenda kerana tidak penuhi standard rekod kemalangan
TIGA pengendali teksi - Trans-Cab, Premier, Smart Automobile - yang merupakan pendatang baru dalam sektor teksi, didenda kerana gagal memenuhi piawaian perkhidmatan dan keselamatan bagi tempoh antara Julai dengan September lalu.
Smart Automobile dan Yellow Top Cab masing-masing pula dikenakan denda $2,000 dan $3,471 kerana gagal memenuhi piawaian rekod kemalangan antara April dengan Jun tahun ini.
Namun, purata kadar kemalangan bagi semua pengendali teksi bertambah baik antara April dengan Jun.
Di antara kesemua pengendali teksi itu, Smart Automobile dikenakan denda tertinggi sebanyak $8,697 kerana kedua-dua kesalahan tersebut.
Jumlah denda terhadap Smart Automobile itu adalah lebih rendah berbanding suku kedua tahun ini.
Menurut satu kenyataan Penguasa Pengangkutan Darat (LTA) semalam, kebanyakan pengendali teksi didapati mematuhi piawaian Mutu Perkhidmatan (QoS) bagi tempoh antara Julai dengan September lalu.
'Purata kadar kemalangan juga bertambah baik daripada 2.4 kemalangan bagi setiap 10 juta kilometer perjalanan dalam suku pertama tahun ini kepada 2.3 kemalangan bagi setiap 10 juta kilometer perjalanan dalam suku kedua,' ujar LTA.
Menurut LTA, hanya Comfort dan CityCab mampu memenuhi piawaian kadar kemalangan yang ditetapkan itu.
Dalam pada itu, Smart Automobile didenda $6,697 kerana gagal memenuhi kadar jawapan panggilan (call answer) dan kadar memenuhi keperluan penumpang.
Trans-Cab pula didenda $3,180 kerana gagal memenuhi kadar jawapan panggilan untuk tempoh dua bulan iaitu pada Jun dan Julai.
Premier didenda $2,988 kerana gagal memenuhi kadar jawapan panggilan bagi tempoh tiga bulan - dari Julai hingga September tahun ini. |
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BARANGAN $50,000 LESAP BILA RUMAH DIPECAH MASUK
SEORANG wanita menggigit jari pada Hari Krismas lalu apabila pencuri memecah masuk rumahnya dan melarikan barang kemas dan elektronik bernilai $50,000.
Menurut polis semalam, wanita berusia 45 tahun itu menyedari kejadian tersebut sekitar 8.30 malam.
Beliau mendakwa mengunci rumahnya di Kuo Chuan Avenue itu sebelum beredar sekitar 6.30 pagi Ahad lalu.
Polis mendapati tingkap bilik tidur rumah itu telah dibuka secara paksa dan dua tiang besi tingkap bilik itu dikeluarkan.
Pagar di belakang rumah itu turut dipecahkan.
Apabila diperiksa, laci dan almari dalam bilik rumahnya telah diselongkar dan barang kemas bernilai $25,000 lesap.
Turut hilang ialah barangan elektronik seperti komputer riba, pemain CD dan kamera digital yang kesemuanya bernilai $25,000.
Sesiapa yang mempunyai maklumat mengenai kejadian itu diminta menghubungi polis di ta lian 1800-255-0000. |
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Shopping online on certain sites risky
December 28, 2005
BUYING counterfeit goods online may pose more risks than just getting a low-quality product.
Screenshot of website selling fake replicas of handbags.
According to an expert from security firm, McAfee, such attractive websites may be set up to steal your personal data too.
Known as phishing websites, they are among the top security threats online today.
Consumers are often snared into visiting them via spam e-mails. The sites will infect your computer with invisible software that monitors your buying patterns or, worse, grab your credit card number.
Said Mr Viren Mantri, McAfee's principal for strategic security services in this region: 'Phishing sites are increasing in number all the time, not just during the festive season. However, during this period, buying patterns go up so consumers need to be more careful.
'Some of the phishing sites look just like authentic websites, so they can fool many people.
'To protect yourself against them, make sure you have antispyware and antiphishing software on your computer which will filter out these websites.'
If you aren't buying from reputable websites like Amazon or local TrustSg-accredited sites (www.trustsg.com.sg), be careful how you use your credit card number.
Mr Mantri said he tries to use PayPal whenever possible. This service acts as the middleman in online purchases, allowing you to buy goods without revealing credit card details.
Lawyer Wong Siew Hong said that it is not an offence to order from counterfeit goods websites.
He said: 'But when you buy such counterfeit goods, you must remember that you are supporting a criminal activity.'
Still, it is an offence when you decide to sell such online purchases to other people.
You can be fined up to $100,000 (or $10,000 per counterfeit item) and jailed up to five years or both. |
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Hot Soup HORROR
Shot seven times for bold defiance
December 28, 2005
AN armed robber literally landed in hot soup after he was scalded by a bak kut teh operator.
Customers at the scene of the crime. --Pics/CHINA PRESS
But the mother of five's defiance cost her her life.
She sustained at least seven gunshot wounds on her chest, stomach and arms, reported The New Straits Times.
Madam Soo Bee Chew, 44, was shot dead after she poured hot bak kut teh soup onto one of three men who tried to rob her customers at her eatery at Jalan Segambut in Mukim Batu yesterday.
Her husband, Mr Piah Chia Siong, 46, rushed her to the Kuala Lumpur Hospital but she died at the emergency ward.
The three gunmen fled in a car after grabbing an undisclosed amount of cash and valuables from several customers.
One of Madam Soo's relatives, Mr Fang, 40, was eating at the shop around lunchtime when the robbers barged in.
The plucky Madam Soo Bee Chew.
He told China Press that the robbers demanded that the customers hand over their money.
NO JOKE
He said he gave them the RM2,000 ($880) he had on him.
Before they fired at Madam Soh, he said, they had warned her that it was no joke.
But she did not heed their warning.
She retaliated by splashing hot soup on one of them.
Mr Fang said that after they shot her, all hell broke loose.
In the chaos, he said, they dropped the pouch that had his RM2,000.
Police gathering the spent bullet casings.
The other customers made a grab for it, he claimed.
'In the end, my RM2,000 was taken by the other customers.'
There were about 20 customers in the stall at the time of the robbery, police said.
Mr Piah said he was washing dishes behind the stall at that time.
Madam Soo was manning the cash counter when two of the gunmen, armed with pistols and wearing towels that covered their faces, entered the eatery.
The third man was behind the wheel in the car.
One of the robbers fired a warning shot while his accomplice ordered her and several customers to hand over their money and valuables.
It was then that Madam Soh grabbed a pot of boiling soup and splashed it on one of them.
The third man, who had waited in a Proton Wira, then rushed in and fired seven shots at Madam Soh, sending horrified customers diving for cover.
The robbers then fled.
Mr Piah then rushed out after hearing the commotion, only to see his wife lying in a pool of blood.
Kuala Lumpur CID Chief SAC II Aziz Bulat said that no other customer was hurt in the robbery.
They found several spent bullet casings at the scene and investigations revealed that the getaway car was fitted with false number plates.
THOUGHT GUN WAS FAKE
There is speculation that the reason Madam Soh decided to intervene was because she thought the guns were fake.
KL is well known for its bak kut teh, made from pork ribs, and is a popular dish among Singaporeans. |
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Are we in SINGAPORE yet?
By Gregory Leow
December 28, 2005
SINGAPORE audiences who watched King Kong over the past week probably got a great thrill out of it.
But it wasn't just for the special effects and the story.
In a US$207 million ($347m) high-profile blockbuster set during the Depression, the last thing you would expect is for the word 'Singapore' to pop up.
But the word was dropped in no fewer than three scenes where Singapore is mentioned as a Far Eastern mystical location that the actors are supposed to sail to to film a movie.
Of course, the movie's director, played by Jack Black, has actually negotiated with the ship's captain to go to Skull Island, where you-know-who lives.
As small and insignificant as we may seem in the global scheme of things, Singapore has been mentioned in more than just a few films and songs, some dating back to as early as the 1920s.
Whether in 1928's The Road To Mandalay or 1930's Moby Dick, Singapore mentions always revolved around our harbour, since we were then a busy colonial outpost.
Singapore was also mentioned in several other war films as an Allied outpost in World War II.
If there were any details beyond the brief mention of us as a port, they were often hugely stereotypical - we seem to have been known for our luscious prostitutes and cabaret dancers.
In 1928's Across To Singapore, starring Joan Crawford, one of the main male characters is always drunk in a brothel in Singapore.
Even 1986's Passion Flower - which was set and shot in Singapore - had plenty of stereotypes.
The main protagonist's Chinese maid tells her master after she is raped: 'I'm sorry, Mr Larry, if I brought you great dishonour.'
SAINT'S TAINT
Only occasionally are there films that try to offer more than just a superficial mention, such as 1979's Saint Jack.
This film, about an expatriate pimp who roamed the underbelly of Singapore soliciting women, was banned here until 1997 because of its seedy portrayal of the country.
Despite the many stereotypes though, the mere mention of Singapore is enough to make us beam with pride.
Said music critic X'Ho, 'forever 27': 'It is inevitable that we get titillated, as we never expect our country to be mentioned.'
Film-maker Eric Khoo said that it was exciting for him to hear Singapore mentioned in movies when he was a child, but not nowadays, as the references are often frivolous.
Like in the movies, the mentions of Singapore in music have also often been facetious.
Examples are Whiskey On The Rocks by AC/DC and Busta Rhymes' Show Me What You Got.
The reference to Singapore add nothing to the song and are very often done just to get the lyrics to rhyme.
'They are just throwing in a name and not specifically referring to any aspect of Singapore,' said X'Ho.
'It could be any generic Tom, Dick or Harry country.'
There are exceptions to the rule.
Singer-songwriter Tom Waits wrote the song Singapore for his 1985 album Rain Dogs.
Even though Singapore was portrayed as a slightly exotic distant harbour in the Far East, the reference has an old-world allusion.
'It is not a bad stereotype as such. There is a certain charm and endearment involved, like when one remembers Bugis Street of old,' said X'Ho.
STEREOTYPED SINGAPORE
But the impression of Singapore by some in the West are generally stereotypical, said Eric.
'I still meet foreigners who think that Singapore is in China. The other things they remember about Singapore is that we cane children and ban chewing gum. I just laugh it off,' he said.
Laughed X'Ho: 'It would be really great if someone came up with a Euro-dance track like that numa numa song in Chicken Little, that made Singapore the focal point.
'It would be famous and will be played in all the clubs because all the
Ah Bengs and Lians would love it.
'Local music snobs would also be appalled that Singapore got famous because of such a song.'
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Japanese punk group Shonen Knife.
Singapore immortalised in song
Ah Singapore
From the 1993 debut album, Let's Knife, by the Japanese punk trio Shonen Knife. The song goes on about Singapore's skyscrapers, chewing gum ban, and Chinese dumplings.
On A Little Street In Singapore
Possibly the most well-known reference to Singapore. This jazz piece by Manhattan Transfer has lyrics describing a romantic encounter under a moonlit night in Singapore.
Singapore
In this song, Tom Waits sings about sailing off to Singapore, then about mad hatters, steeple bells, and a dwarf sea-captain with only one arm. Like an insane musical circus romp. Makes no sense really.
Singapore Sling
This six-piece Icelandic band formed in 2000 plays psychedelic rock, with influences from Jesus And Mary Chain and Primal Scream.
Our place in Hollywood
Several other movies have also had honourable and not-so-honourable mentions of Singapore. They include:
Pirates Of The Caribbean (2003)
As said by Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp) when he rips off Elizabeth Swann's (Keira Knightley) corset, to the surprise of the British guard: 'Clearly, you've never been to Singapore.'
Road To Singapore (1940)
The first of a series of 'Road To' films, which led to a successful partnership between Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, featuring great comedy, a flimsy plot and lots of song and dance.
To End All Wars (2001)
The story of the Scottish 93rd Division who are captured after the Japanese invasion of Singapore in 1941 and transferred to a Japanese prisioner-of-war camp in Malaysia, where the film mainly takes place.
Paradise Road (1997)
An Australia-Singapore production about World War II, with location shots in Singapore. It was panned by critics and did not do well at the US box-office either.
The Virgin Soldiers (1969)
A British comedy-drama about conscripted soldiers in Singapore in the 1950s. There is a Singapore prostitute named Juicy Lucy.
Singapore (1947)
A World War II veteran goes back to British-controlled Singapore and reunites with his long-lost lover (Ava Gardner) who has amnesia and is married to another man.
Flight From Singapore (1962)
American Psycho.
A British film about a flight crew, transporting badly-needed blood to a young girl in a Singapore hospital and has to crash-land in the dense Malayan jungle.
American Psycho (2000)
About a yuppie murderer, Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale), who keeps women's body parts in his apartment as his part-time hobby: 'It's time for Paul to take a little trip. Where do I send the *****? Dallas? Paris? Singapore? London?'
Batman Begins (2005)
Film about Batman's origins, starring oddly enough, Christian Bale again. The context is on the making of Batman's mask: 'We order the main part of this cowl from Singapore, via a dummy corporation.' |
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Category: Negeri & Negara
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